Author Topic: Bachmann 39002 N Scale Ballast Spreader  (Read 2974 times)

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nkalanaga

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Re: Bachmann 39002 N Scale Ballast Spreader
« Reply #15 on: December 03, 2016, 01:59:34 AM »
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I usually used a subscription card from a magazine.  Curl the card, scoop some ballast into it , and pour from there.  Level it with an old toothbrush, then touch up with a small paintbrush.

Those cards are cheap, plentiful, and durable, so might as well use them.  They also make good shims for low spots in the track.
N Kalanaga
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davefoxx

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Re: Bachmann 39002 N Scale Ballast Spreader
« Reply #16 on: December 03, 2016, 07:51:38 AM »
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A spoon and a small, soft brush are in my ballasting arsenal.

DFF

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Lemosteam

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Re: Bachmann 39002 N Scale Ballast Spreader
« Reply #17 on: December 03, 2016, 09:23:39 AM »
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I tried making one with an empty prescription bottle, but was unhappy without some sort of shutoff.  Maybe one of those small talcum bottles with the rotating lid shutoff.  Four little grooves on the edge to follow the rails, stop, twist to close, lift past switch, lower, untwist and away you go...

robert3985

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Re: Bachmann 39002 N Scale Ballast Spreader
« Reply #18 on: December 03, 2016, 10:15:04 AM »
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I use a big spoon, a soft, large make up brush and my ballast spreaders make out of Plastruct sheet plastic whatever-the-Hell-it-is contoured to a prototypical ballast contour stolen from official U.P. documents that you used to be able to download from their site.

I also leave ballasting as the last scenery item to be done after scenery around the tracks is pretty much finished.

Additionally, I screen my real-rock Highball N-scale ballast so most of the dust is gone and the "rocks" are about a scale 3.5" in diameter.  I you don't get rid of the dust, scale N-scale ballast has a tendency to look like lumpy concrete.  Get rid of the dust, and it looks like real ballast. 

I also blend several shades of Highball N-scale ballast together with graded real-rock that I've dug from my LDE real sites to get the blend looking like the gray, black, red-brown, light gray mix that's on the real railroad. A couple of buckets of sacred dirt goes a long way.

Photo (1) - Ballast profile spreaders:


Photo (2) - Ballasted and weathered mainline and branchline trackage at Echo Curve:


I use various soft brushes to get the small rocks off the tops of the ties and sides of the rails.  Lots of work, but well worth it IMO

Cheerio!
Bob Gilmore