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Nice bridge Mark! I like the brass tube for rigidity- that is a good idea.
Tim, I would think they would have had machinery on those work sites that ran several different types of fuel. Perhaps portable power generators, heaters, water/mud pumps, hydraulic pumps, power saws etc. Some would have required mixed gas, others straight gas and some diesel. This would justify such a car vs. a giant diesel tank you might bring to a remote locomotive service location. The tanks likely had their own hand pumps on them or were gravity fed, and the bottles stored in the middle could have been welding gasses and or propane.
I said the week was "almost" hopper free..... No work was done on the new slab sides but this Exactrail car got the treatment and I must say, I am pleased with the result....
Mark, based on my recent experience, that makes a lot of sense. The Cisco bridge is moving along, but distortion was a problem. I think I just found my solution.
Also worked on some weathering too:
The weathering is absolutely outstanding. At the first glimpse I thought those were 1:1 car sides! Or at least H0 cars or larger. Seriously. Did Tom Mann learn how to weather from you? While I don't expect to ever be that good (I think that it really takes certain type of talent to do this - not just something you can just learn), I'm interested in your weathering technique. Have you documented your weathering techniques here in the past or are you planning to do so in the future?
The Kettle River truss bridges actually break in half. Two long lengths of telescoping square tubing are used inside the main tubes to hold the two bridges in alignment. This might work for joining the sides of your Cisco bridge together as well...just a thought.
The weathering is absolutely outstanding.
Just received Version 2 of the lasercut Nn3 switch tie sets.