0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic.
The Lowell Smith baggage cars are ex-Walthers. I think that the fluted side car has no real prototype, but the smooth side car does - something like GGW?
@williek those look great! I'd like to learn more about your modification of the roof of the Bachmann car. Did you have to fill the corrugations before sanding? What kind of sanding tools did you use?
Well, the doors on the RPO-baggage have been fixed, and windows glazed. Unfortunately, I've realized that the castings (they are resin) are warped.The GOOD news is that the body is bowed down in the middle, and the roof is bowed up, so if I glue them together the care will be sort-of-straight.I'm not sure what kind of glue to use. No matter what I use, my plan is to1. apply glue to the mating surfaces of the roof and body, mostly in the middle of the car.2. Put them together and tie them with wound string until the glue dries.I only expect to get one shot at this, so I'm looking for suggestions on what glue to try. My first thought is Walthers/Hobsco Goo, my second is a medium-thick Cyanacrylate super-glue.Anyone have experience to share? Or wild ideas?
>> so it will look a little odd with properly painted cars.While I seriously applaud the efforts, real trains aren't always painted (or appear) exactly alike, nor clean, nor 'uniform' as perfectionists or corporates wanted. So just like highly detailled precision scale models on plywood layouts, things are often at odds with the reality.