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Thanks Paul. And welcome to The Railwire. I've learned lots from this gang. Many talented modelers who are happy to share hang out here. Pretty entertaining at times too. I use an ancient Micro-Trains MT-1055 coupler height gauge. They're still made. Other tools / gauges are available too. I work the car to get a ride height I'm happy with. I'll generally use a proto photo of a typical car as a guide, balancing accuracy with the physical reality of our small models. Then back the car up to the gauge to determine what needs to be done to the shell, underframe or both to get the coupler height right. I'm kind of feeling my way through this whole exercise, so there's less science at play than meets the eye. I suspect others on this site go about it in a far more methodical and precise manner than I am. Whatever works for you is what matters.Steve
Gee. Sounds like alchemy.I guess you've gotta have talent or something
Hmmmm. So by cutting the coupler plate the underframe can rest the thickness of the coupler plate below the end of the molded car body, if I'm following you correctly. A new hole for the mounting screw would be needed - No problem in plastic. A bit more of a problem in metal but certainly doable. Moving the coupler back would make it worth the effort. I hadn't thought about it that way Bryan. One more trick in the bag. Thanks for the tip.
When you say "cut a notch in the floor" I'm assuming that since you're adding a mounting surface inside the car that the size of the notch is not important. Just so it's big enough to clear the coupler box dimensions. Correct?
Thanks re: the AC&Y combo door. I don't like the spacer I installed on the sliding door side. Sure wish someone would do that shell in N.
...It is always fun to take something you already have and turn it into something else
BTW Skibbe's stockcar here:http://forum.atlasrr.com/forum/topic.asp?ARCHIVE=true&TOPIC_ID=32163
Wow, that was 6 years ago already? Crazy. At some point I added a photoetched roofwalk and some weathering. And hay. And here's a side by side comparison. While it doesn't have the correct slat count, I think the look changed dramatically with the removal of the sill and setting it on its trucks lower. It looks long and low, and that's good for a stock car.