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Not a bad idea! A very thin strip of styrene might be able to make it look like the pilot beam is continuous.
Now that I have an HOn3 2-truck MDC shay kit coming, I have to decide what to do with it:1) A close-enough Uintah Ry shay?2) A freelanced lumber company?3) A could-have-been engine lettered for one of the actual lumber company railroads that connected to the RGS?4) The San Juan Freakin' Central?The only reason I'm not 100% sold on (4) is that my remaining San Juan Central sunrise herald decals won't fit on the Shay tender. But that's OK...even Malcolm only lettered one side of SJC locomotive 361 with that herald, spelling out the railroad's name in standard alphabet decals on the engineer's side.
Wasn't there actually lumber companies along the RGS that used Shays?
I've seen you mention the Uintah Ry. several times. What does this have to do with the RGS or the SJC? Do they interchange? Did one of your lines purchase an ex-Uintah Shay? I say go with the San Juan Central, and, since it might be late in the road's life or they wanted to get it out on the road as soon as possible, I suggest just lettering it with initials or whatever will fit on the tender.EDIT: Thinking about this further, if not the SJC, how about this? Letter it for a fictional neighboring lumber company that is a subsidiary of the RGS. Sort of like the Linville River Ry. and the East Tennessee & Western North Carolina RR. Then, you could justify it running on your layout without modeling the trackage owned by the lumber company.DFF
Fantastic! That thing is tiny. Does it run well enough to pull itself, let alone a freight car or two?DFF
Be careful taking that thing around Windy Point. It’ll get blown off the tracks!DFF