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Yes, I rough cut foam with a knife, but it leaves an unrealistic flat shape.
... One of the issues I often see in model railroad scenery is overly exaggerated verticality in scenery. I'm betting that the difficulty in cutting through thicker material at a realistic angle contributes to this. ...
The trickiest thing is that invariably the ideal placement of some of the Tortoises is right where a part of the wood frame is in the way. In one case I actually ran the Tortoise actuating wire vertically through a wood brace.
This is why I use the Kreg jig/pocket hole screws for cross members. If that ends up being the case, I can just unscrew the 2 from each end and move it slightly,Phil
I'd say to keep trying. Most of my scenery work is done with a knife, but I then follow that up with a Stanley Surform rasp to round everything off. My point is that thinner material makes this all much easier because the knife blade doesn't have to cut through as much material, especially when you're shooting for an angle.One of the issues I often see in model railroad scenery is overly exaggerated verticality in scenery. I'm betting that the difficulty in cutting through thicker material at a realistic angle contributes to this.I guess these might show what I mean:http://conrail1285.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/2016-05-10-21.59.02.jpghttp://conrail1285.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/2016-06-06-22.46.24.jpg
... I’m kind of partial to using 1-1/2” think material since it’s about scale 20’ in n-scale.
There's some magic to that. USGS topo maps at the highest resolution (1:24,000) typically express contour lines in 20' elevation increments. If you have the space to do a scene directly scaled down, printing it to scale either tiled or on a large-format printer gives you exact templates for each layer of the wedding cake. I did it as a test a while back, which failed only because I had to compress one axis to get it to fit, and doing so blew the proportions. It would have been great otherwise.
I used my survey to create an exact scale model of my home property using this very technique...
Blazing Saddles... one of the funniest and greatest movies ever made.