0 Members and 6 Guests are viewing this topic.
It’s not larger, by much, over the previous DT500...Here is a comparison photo.The new throttle, with the backlit, soft buttons, and large LED screen, is far more intuitive to use and the large throttle knobs allow me to control speed with one digit of the same hand I use to hold it.
Meanwhile back at THE PONDEROSA:
Completed some updates to my fleet of LifeLike Alco C424'sAdded some under walkway detail to close the gap between the body and the trucks.Evergreen H beam (slightly modified) did the trick.
Since the weather was nice here in the UK recently I decided to take the diorama outside for a few quick shots, nothing beats natural light for model photography
I also made a train of military WW2 equipment. An M4 Sherman weighed about 30 tons. The MT and Atlas 50 foot flat cars were 50 ton rated. Unfortunately your flat ca is over loaded. Sorry. Tom
Thanks. I hadn't realized you could that much weight on any N-scale car! Actually, the flat is a 3D printed made up car with the load based on proto photos of two Shermans on four axle cars:https://qph.fs.quoracdn.net/main-qimg-5e833dca1e234e70c61fc0ffa39b0761?fbclid=IwAR3yqr8D1ScAsWvQxzOE27UJ-r3-F1pKtm3rjYLxVr5OpczvjRkI1Rahwa8https://www.ww2online.org/image/train-cars-transporting-sherman-tankshttps://www.worldwarphotos.info/gallery/usa/tanks/m4-sherman-tank/m4a2-sherman-tanks-on-railroad-cars/Nonetheless, interesting point. Perhaps a reason to make more cars and mix it up like the last photo. Wonder if it made any different between models as well as if they were coming from the factory without fuel, ammo, machine guns, etc..Cheers,Bob
The Railwire is not your personal army.