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Continuing my affront to good modeling with work on these old first-gen kits. First up, the crane.
I really like the brickwork on the machine factory, that's what got me thinking. Like the trackplan too.
David,The factory looks good. Nice contrast with the mortar lines. Do you have any other pics of the stone engine house showing the magic marker bleed thru paint technique. That seems very interesting.
Taking a break from the retro layout to work on yet another one--but before you flip out, this one was commissioned by a Postage Stamp Trains collector. I'm actually being paid to do more of the same!The layout is as simple as it gets: a twice-around loop on a flat base:It may seem seriously simple, but it meets the client's needs and his budget, so it's hard to argue with success. He's happy, so I'm happy.The base is under construction, beginning with the same lauan plywood on 1x2 box frame as my other retro layouts--the only difference being that I'm taking the time to finish the frame with stain and sealer:And it's being populated by a bunch of Postage Stamp's American-styled structure kits (links lead to detail pages on these kits):
As a retro layout, does this mean some of those "box of sticks" wood craftsmen kits (Like Campbell's) will appear on it? Certainly they count as "retro N". I remember building the water tank kit way back when.
Nice simple plan. Question: Would the outer run after it goes past the crossing top left, be able to elevate and cross over and then back down on the inner loop and still keep the twice around look? Maybe extend the inner loop bottom before it does the 180?
Sure, one could do that. I can't, because it would blow the budget.
Understandable, I've been following yours and Lee's small layouts, and something like this would give me some stuff to work on my skills, try some new things I've read/watched, etc.
I'd start with the plan for the N&RF, and just leave out most of the sidings to simplify it.Or, consider out one of these:http://davidksmith.com/track-planning/plan_46.htmhttp://davidksmith.com/track-planning/plan_18.htmhttp://davidksmith.com/track-planning/plan_31.htm