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Beautiful work, @Bob! Your technique is so effective.@SAH, for the kind of detail work you like to do, you could find tons of things to use a printer on. Hand rails are probably not one of them though, so keep pressing on. I love to see that kind of effort in N scale.Right... For the corn syrup tanker, I was able to simply thread the old guard rails out of the stanchions and re-thread new .015" steel wire, but I'm also working on a Kaolin tanker upgrade. The stock car has guard rails and stanchions cast as one piece from a very soft plastic that might as well be string (I hate those!). For that project I actually printed some new stanchions to accommodate wire. That is working surprisingly well; I'll post photos when they're done.
So, will Gary Hinshaw Industries break out and make you a millionaire marketing these replacement ends, or will you do the humane thing and send the drawings to @Atlas Paul so Atlas can fix the problem on future releases? Who knew it took a rocket scientist to design railroad cars.
Mark: KD/MT has made their PS-1 combination-door car in GN, NP, and MILW.
Yeah, I think they did UP too. The main problem for me with the MicroTrains model is that it is vertically challenged.The few 40' MTLs that I still have (I bought them when they first came out) are kept for nostalgic reasons at this point. I know that the doors are wrong on this Roco model, but this will be a placeholder until something better comes along - and it didn't cost me a dime! (well, roofwalk, paint, and decals will cost me some dimes).Anyway, this should be fun (the Roco tooling looks pretty nice with that paint removed BTW).Mark
So, will Gary Hinshaw Industries break out and ... do the humane thing and send the drawings to @Atlas Paul so Atlas can fix the problem on future releases?
I've done this to nearly all that I have, save for maybe one or two @Mark5 It helps.
This might be an idiotic suggestion, but how about using an Atlas PS1 as a starting point and adding the plug door?
@SAH, for the kind of detail work you like to do, you could find tons of things to use a printer on. Hand rails are probably not one of them though, so keep pressing on. I love to see that kind of effort in N scale.
Um, I believe Gary is an astrophysicist.