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I looked into casting for the bridge below.....I had gone as far as building a master to cast. After holding it in hand. I realized how thin the cross section was going to be and how hard it was going to be to keep it a uniform thickness, fill in all the girder details, and not warp in the process. I decided it would be cheaper and faster to use Micro Engineering bridge parts to create the girders the length I need. It turns out the panel size was very close to what was used on the bridge I was modeling, I just needed them in longer sections. I got out the chopper one evening and made a bulk of uniform parts and spent another couple nights building.The result turned out very nice. I had considered Archer rivets to finish out the cap strips on the girders but realized I would have close to $100 in decals to finish it out. Two double rows of rivets per side, roughly 30" each was going to eat up 5-6 sheets of riviets.For a ballasted deck bridge, you probably have a lot less detail to worry about.
The old school way I remember seeing in MR & RMC was to use a watch gear of suitable size, and make a little pizza cutter device to run over the brass which was placed on a surface with some give. You'd have to use annealed brass for this to work (well?). No idea how well it works. Maybe using it on that copper foil tape used to make stained glass windows would be better than brass for long strips in N scale.
You might think about just making a few panels. Cast them, assemble the panel castings into a complete plate, then cast the plate.
Tony,Both of those bridges are pretty HAWT! Any chance they appeared somewhere else on TRW with a build thread?