0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Now, this is modeling. Two big thumbs up.
Hi Craig,Well OK, now we have a sense of the scope of this project. It’s quite a project, but it looks like you’ve got a good handle on it. The Centralia dome is a bit of of godsend, eh? It’s not clear if you’ve solved the FP? issue yet, but if if it’s an FP7 you could modify a Kato Milwaukee Road unit. I’m finishing up a CPR unit: you’ll need to fill in the lower headlight, replace the winter hatch, add a dynamic brake fan and replace the passenger pilot with freight pilot. The pilot is the most difficult part of the project. If you have a spare shell with a freight pilot you could do a swap, but I cut the passenger pilot off and moved it back .030 (and tightened the radius a bit) and filled the resulting gap with carefully bent piece of Evergreen .030 1/4 round strip styrene. I had difficulty getting solid joint for the relocated pilot and had to add a bit of reinforcing inside the nose. As a result the stock front coupler assembly on the chassis wouldn’t fit inside the shell so I removed it and body mounted a Z scale coupler in the nose of the shell. I also replace the cast on handrails with .080 wire ones and add etches stainless grills.I was meaning to ask about your success with Rapido Proto paint after an earlier post, but your comments to the yellow handrails brings this to the fore. I’ve had decidedly mixed success. When it “works”, it’s great, but sometimes... While painting my FP7 and F7B I had issues with the grey being too thick from the bottle and needing a bit of thinning to avoid ‘orange peel’. On the other hand the CPR Tuscan out of the bottle was about the right viscosity, but was sort of translucent and I had trouble getting an opaque coating without it going on too thick. In the end I managed with both but it was right on the knife edge of success/failure. Both colours were thoroughly mixed. Even on a brush (for touch ups) the Tuscan is translucent. On the other hand I have some Proto yellow that I use for the handrails (brush painted) that has great opacity and viscosity and looks like it would be a dream to spray. Perhaps there is some inconsistency in the product? Geoff
Boxcar context:The 2556 and 91023 are both 10'0" IH cars built by National Steel Car. Those unique waffle pattern ends are NSC's own proprietary ends known by railfans/modelers as the "NSC-2" style. Sylvan Scale Models once made a resin part in HO scale for this end, I believe Yarmouth Model Works has these parts now. True Line Trains made this car* in HO scale, and quite recently Intermountain has added this end as on option for their "1937" 10'0" box car in HO. I don't know that anyone has ever made this in N scale though...*Both cars would have originally been from the 90000-90999 series with 6' sliding doors.2556 had been previously rebuilt to a 91000 series car with 8' sliding doors, and obviously the door on one side was plated over when it was converted to service on the passenger train.91023 is a total oddball with a double door rebuild instead of the typical single 8' sliding door of the rest of the 91000 series. It gets around though and I shot it in a work train in Englehart in 2015.That model 2808 is actually an accurate model of a group of ex-SP FMC and PCF 50' boxcars acquired for express service between Cochrane and Moosonee. I believe these mostly run between the freight sheds on the semi-weekly freight.
Well actually...Under 1937 AAR boxcar:https://www.intermountain-railway.com/n/nboxcars.htmhttps://www.intermountain-railway.com/n/html/65799.htm(That's a photo of the HO model as representation, but it looks like they have it listed as upcoming for N scale too - with correct NSC-2 ends...)I'm less familiar with N scale offerings than HO, so I took a peek at their site to make sure they had the same 10' "1937 AAR" car in that scale before agreeing "yes that's exactly what I'd do", and what do you know...Take that, do the same door replacement and other modifications that the prototype did.2556 and 91023 both are rebuilt from this original series, and this gets you the correct ends. They're not delivered yet (the HO ones only just hit stores recently) but probably worth waiting to get the right parts.Note the beefed up side sill under the doors to reinforce the larger openings.
I happened (just by chance) to be in my LHS and noted they have 2 Kaslo Shops FP7 “late CPR/ONR” on theirs shelves...Geoff
Ha! Good news...