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My 1941 Model Railroader Cyclopedia has drawings of a PRR N5D in it if anybody cares. PM me, I'll supply a scan. It has a scale on it.It's always a crapshoot on finding drawings, bingo.
I do like your approach. I think if you use a steel square and some sandpaper to really true up those cuts, you should be able to hide the seam right down in a joint between the siding so it won't show without too much trouble.The Quality Craft N6 kits are terrific. I still have one I built years ago. They are much MUCH easier to build than the brass Quality Craft N5c kits. I'd highly recommend going that way if you find one. And if you put it on the new Shapeways frame with nice wheelsets, it would be killer.
I sent Mark and Ed the drawings I found, which are differently proportioned than those and look more like an N6D to me than a generic bobber.There were a lot of those in PA. The preserved ones I'm aware of is the restored one on Strasburg, the parts pile at RRMPA, a museum quality Lehigh Valley one in the RRMPA, the Huntington & Broad Top Mountain ex-PRR N6D at RRMPA, the ex-Ma&Pa out at Canonsburg, and the one that was in Dallas and now is semi-restored and at the Western NY Railway Museum site in Buffalo, with the cupola off. Digging will find you more.The LVRR one at RRMPA looks very much like the typical train-set bobber, a little shorter and higher than the N6.
@mmagliaro were these the kits you gave me?
Sure it's better, Ed! Hands-down much finer detail in the siding and window frames than the Bachmann or Arnold models.Can you reuse the end platform railings and brakewheel from the MT caboose?
The only thing that I'm worried about is that joint in the siding seam on the side. It looks a little wavy, and will probably show through paint the way it is. Did you try sanding those mating edges against a flat block with very fine sandpaper on it to get them really square?
But between the nicer MT car body siding and roof, and the 3D cupola and undercarriage, this looks far better than the commercial bobbers.
Ed, I would recommend getting a NWSL True Sander since you've entered the splicing game. Don't approach it with the "I can putty that up later" mindset. Instead, "These edges are square and meet perfectly and I can use thin CA or Tamiya liquid cement and be done."
But -- since this time around you are likely going to need to putty - here's a trick. Try putting a thin bead of putty along the joint edge before you glue them together. A little should squeeze out, and then you can carve it away while it is still softer than the plastic side.