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I think that flat trim board under the ends needs to be pushed back to the wall.
@Ed Kapuscinski If you want to do something it's not too late. And is this what you remarked your Dad needed? I played with the little bit of info I had, the one PRR ND drawing, to see what I might be able to do as I haven't done any boxed/ shell cars of any type so this seemed as good as any to get some practice. So far, the dimensions are accurate per the drawing, the ones it has, and a little bit of scaling for things like window size and placement, and I'm generally happy with what printed. For this test print I assembled it all and printed it in one piece but I have drawn all of the window frames and doors as separate components, as well as roof and cupola, to aid in sanding, paint, and assembly as well as choosing best print position. Notice there are a couple of lines evident straight down the sides in the lower body half. Those are from pausing the print to confirm it was staying attached with the supports I had placed, not something you would normally do and those lines wouldn't be on a final printed piece.Here are a few pics of the test printed part as well as the drawing used. I think I've at least got the proportions correct.
I wasn't getting what you were talking about there but I just realized what it was. And yes, it definitely goes back and I don't think it even belongs there at all. If you look at the drawing I was working with you'll see it but even while drawing it, it didn't feel right. The Strasburg pictures show nothing like that at all, pushed back or out front. The wood goes right up to the inner arch of the roof... I think. What is there is an outer brace that extends from the body to support just that corner on each side. Also, It looks like the cab corners are curved metal and might have brackets on them for corner marker lights. There's a LOT of detail to do.
It is there. Just the top piece of trim where the vertical boards end. Either way the 3D model looks good!
Now for some questions: Is this done in SketchUp? Any idea how many hours you spent on the drawing so far? I'm always interested in the amount of time it tales someone to create a model drawing (for 3D printing).
Yes, very helpful Mark - thanks! I am just trying to wrap my head around the man-hours involved in a project like that. Actually the fact that you are a SketchUp novice is a plus, since I'll be in the same boat.While the initial time investment is rather large, the model can easily be duplicated (printed) multiple times. Seems like it would be a natural small business opportunity. But that comes with its own time investment requirement.
How does the time required compare with traditional scratchbuilding?
Looking at the drawing, aren't the cupola siding boards vertical and not horizontal as the model has?