They came out rather well I think. Great job.Here are some more shots of the new hoppers. They were not easy builds but now they're here, I am glad I handled the expense and effort!
They came out rather well I think. Great job.Here are some more shots of the new hoppers. They were not easy builds but now they're here, I am glad I handled the expense and effort!
Looks great. Your detailing is fabulous.It is on the layout now. I just need to add a couple more figures, and a lot of clutter around the area, then the scene is complete.
Came out really well. I enjoyed you telling the construction details, and history behind the area.I shot this video late last night, on my third attempt, just to show what I’d been up to and for those who have just seen the layout through still photos. It was all in one take, so when my phone booted me off near (but not at) very end of it, I didn't bother shooting it yet again:
Well, I do public relations work for space camp, and I've been there several times.That was a fun tour! Man, do I hear you about having too many hobbies for one's pay grade.
Thanks for doing that.
Now that Nashville is a big city, they keep all the school buses in one big school-system parking area, but when I was a kid the bus drivers drove their buses home with them.Which Jeep forum? I'm on the G503 forum for WW2 Jeep owners...
Here we go, my newest project. A while back, someone uploaded color movie film from Hampton, Tennessee during what it labelled as taken during the fall of 1940. Sadly, I looked up the Vimeo video and can’t find it there now. I’m glad I screen saved a few shots from it. In this film, they showed a few Carter County school busses heading back to Elizabethton from a football game. They were 1939 Dodge truck fronts with what have to be custom bus bodies.
Sadly, nobody makes a ’39 Dodge truck in O scale, so I had to find something that could be used as a representation. My scratch-building skills to create the bus body (with all its compound curves) are nowhere up to the task. So, I had to compromise there, too. I’m going to use a Russian GAZ bus body, grafted onto the front of another maker’s truck front end.
I’m going to grind off the nose of the truck from the firewall, do the same to the bus body and graft them together.
After that, I’ll shorten the truck frame to match the wheelbase for the finished body and mount it onto the shortened truck frame. It’ll then be painted in yellow, and I’ll make my own decals as I have a typeface very close to the original busses already prepared for the decals.
The irony here is that I model the summer of 1943, so a school bus doing anything doesn’t make a great deal of sense, though I assume they did get used in the summer for moving people around as needed?
It looks pretty convincing in the color photo.I’ve been experimenting with some photos after changing the structure I use to represent smoke from locomotives in photos. It had been covered in cotton balls, but now I stretched foam pillow stuffing over it and painted it black. I’m just playing around trying to determine the best way to represent smoke with it, as it looks great in person.
In this shot, ET&WNC # 12 brings water car WC2 (formerly the tender of now-scrapped Stoney Creek Southern RR locomotive #2) slowly past the Unaka Company barrel plant at Winner, TN
And here, #9 brings passenger coach 23 around the curve at Sadie, TN. Photographer Clarence Ilyankoff watches through the lens of his Speed Graphic camera:
I will be doing more experiments to best show the smoke.
Seems to me its taking a very good pic there. And I can't get over the detail you have put on that store! The peeling paint, the worn step going into the door. Amazing!I got a new cell phone over the weekend (my old one was ready to give up) and I'm playing around with it's camera. Frankly, I think the camera in my previous one was better, but we'll see...