0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic.
Found a photo courtesy of the Passenger Car Photo Index- you are certainly correct that it isn't very much like the MTL car. (ps- while the url says "Ogden Canyon" the photo shows "Ogden Canon" on the car side.)http://www.drgw.net/gallery/v/SGPassengerCars/HWPassengerCars/OgdenCanyon/drgw-ogdencanyon-saltlakecity_ut-_1952_-000.jpg.html?g2_imageViewsIndex=2
I got to the thumbnail as well, and that is a DC-9. Lots of differences between it and the 737 fuselage MTL sells.In the brief searches I did, I could find no examples of a new fuselage being shipped painted... for Boeings, all painting takes place at the end of the assembly process in Washington so the chances of a new fuselage having a red stripe on it are very low. I am curious as to where MTL got the idea for a painted fuselage. The images I did find of painted fuselages are similar to the link above, i.e., scrap.
Ian,Re: "In true TRW fashion we are putting way to much thought into this considering the other major announcement was a Solar System locomotive."Au contraire.We are engaged in a lively discussion concerning the modeling of a prototype railcar and the load it's carrying, which is one of the positive attributes of this forum.
.... Apparently I'm not adequately conveying my sarcasm and and humor with us taking this debate seriously.. The information is great, and shows how you can adjust and improve the plane model to be more prototypical, and the 'pics or it didn't happen' search found some great examples of what 'could be prototypical' with a great potential weathered release. I'm pretty sure Micro-Trains is throwing prototype out the window and aiming for the bright and shiny impulse purchase market.Until Micro-Trains drops the mic with a prototype pic of what they were doing..... then yeah.. all we can do is debate aimlessly.~Ian
I DID find this... http://www.rrpicturearchives.net/showPicture.aspx?id=1058949And this from 1967t/uploads/2018/02/737-10000th-Fuselage-Aviation-Week-Article-02-20-18.pdfAnd this.... specifically Volume 3.. (Some interesting sample photos.. including an SP uni-level auto rack with an airplane wing.)http://www.planesontrains.com/
I'll fix it tomorrow if someone doesn't beat me to it..It was a PDF with couple of photos of a Santa Fe GP7/9 pulling the first 737-100 out of the factory in Wichita to go to Washington for final assembly.Although, at that time, I guess they shipped the fuselage in sections.
These are probably the photos you are describing. I found them in the Interwebs few years ago. They are from 1966 and 1967.
https://jmmullis.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/737-10000th-Fuselage-Aviation-Week-Article-02-20-18.pdfHere is the link again..~Ian