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This is the sky:This is the sky on drugs:
(I hear the chorus, "WE TOLD YOU SO!" Yeah, yeah, yeah. )
The sky's the limit! Or more accurately, the sky is limiting progress at the moment. First, the fun stuff. You guys know I've been playing a lot with: 1) lighting, and 2) UV-luminescent paints for night skies, and some ground effects such as switchstands and lighted structures. These projects have converged. I was doing more research on the Wildfire pro UV paints and finally ran across somebody's site advising against using LED UV lighting with Wildfire, it's the wrong wavelength and the results will be poor. I can attest that, yes, the results were disappointing. The full story is Wildfire and other UV-sensitive paints require a 365nm light source, while the LED sources being sold by the stage lighting companies are 390-400nm. UV "blacklight" tubes and other more traditional UV sources were recommended.It's always a bad idea to tell me I can't do something. 365nm LEDs exist, I know that because it is also the working wavelength for UV-cured resins, and super-bright 365nm LEDs are used in dental resin curing wands (Shapeways users also might want to take note). They're just very expensive, at least from US sources. eBay to the rescue, as usual. A Chinese vendor is selling UV spotlights in several wavelengths in the popular track-lighting formats - regular screw base, MR16 and GU10. GU10 is what I'm using for daylight spots, so there you go. I ordered a couple of 365nm samples which arrived over the weekend. My biggest concern was the vendor fudging whether they really were the stated wavelength.(text and images removed)
You are using UV bulbs, produced by a Chinese manufacturer, purchased on EBay. Given that UV is implicated in skin cancer and cataracts, you might want to check out the possible health consequences of this. Other than that, your sky is ingenious, and looks good. ... IIRC, they used a series of backdrop layers, with a 2-D flat section right in front of the sky, on which the background hills etc. were pasted / painted. The sky was just painted in various shades of blue, simplifying the painting. ...
>>... This is the sky on drugs. ...
Received supplies and tools from Fast Tracks a few days ago. I'm pretty happy with the modified Atlas turnouts:Thanks again to @Mark W for the technique. Much, much smoother in operation than stock. I suppose experience will speed up the points filing. I like how the servo points motor can be fine-tuned to almost no pressure, but still maintain full closure. Easier on the solder joint. Another change was using phosphor bronze instead of music wire for the points link. Easy to solder the PB to the PC board throwbar - I was using CA - so another weak point of the design has been solved.
I went back several dozen pages trying to find referenced post and couldn't. Was it in a different thread? I am interested in trying this, can you steer me in the right direction?Thanx,Rick