0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Just noticed got an Allagash thing going on.
Pasco, Washington, in the 1970s, had a similar case with a power pole. On Lewis Street, the main east-west street, at Oregon Street, the main north-south east of the BN tracks, there was a power pole right on the edge of the road. Literally, in the curb, not the sidewalk, or the gas station lot. Every couple months, some impaired driver would hit it, and black out much of downtown, as that was one of the main feeder lines.I was working nights at the only all-night restaurant in town, so saw quite a few of these blackouts. The power would come back on, an hour and 20 minutes later. Every time. Why so dependable? The local power company had a replacement pole, ready to install, at their maintenance yard. Our night manager would call them, they'd grab the pole, pull the old stub out, and stick the new pole in. Transfer the wires, reset the breakers, and we'd be back in business.Sometime after 1978, when we moved, the city rebuilt the intersection, and moved the pole well back, into the gas station's lot.
Flight2000: Or. leave the traffic light the way it is, and say it was built that way on purpose. As truck trailers got longer, too many drivers ended up cutting the corner, knocking the poles down, and demolishing the hedges. This way, the pole isn't likely to get hit.
I dig it. Who's static grass are you using?
Scenic Express, I have been using it for a while now. All 4 and 7 mm. It will be air-brushed with buff and earth Tamiya paint (it's Golden, Late Summer, and Green Summer sparingly on Green Summer). and add a few tufts I've tried to do the "Boomer" drop of matte medium then push in a few needles of static grass. Thanks, Ed you inspired this.