I didn't like the long look of the tender as it was, so I decided to chop out a section and shorten the length. I used the decals that would grace the sides as a gauge of just how much I could cut and still fit "OCALI CREEK". With this measurement, I determined I could remove about an inch.
Using a hobby saw, I made the cuts as shown below:
After checking with a square, sanding, checking, more sanding, checking again, and still more sanding, I was able to arrive at mostly square and straight cut ends which mated well.
I bonded the joint with Testors liquid cement for plastic and braced it with the plastic modeler's secret scrap; a bit of bread clip. The tender floor and underframe was secured with the same cement, but braced with small styrene strips along the length.
While I don't have much planned for the locomotive itself apart from a few minor detail changes, the tender modifications are quite extensive. It will need pads in the shell for screws to attach it to the frame, a soldering board on which the decoder and all the wiring come together, plus details, some of which will be scratchbuilt. This is shaping up to be a fine project.
Search This Blog
Saturday, April 28, 2018
Monday, April 23, 2018
Green Steam II
What happens when you strip the Southern Green paint off an IHC Mogul? You find green plastic underneath that green paint!
Notice the silver smokebox and firebox paint didn't come off completely. I may have been able to get more to release had I soaked it longer. What you see here is the result of a couple hours in 91% rubbing alcohol. I finished removing the silver with a scraper. The only other green plastic is the cylinders and saddle, not shown here. The rest - basically the frame - is molded in black plastic, and was unpainted.
Notice the silver smokebox and firebox paint didn't come off completely. I may have been able to get more to release had I soaked it longer. What you see here is the result of a couple hours in 91% rubbing alcohol. I finished removing the silver with a scraper. The only other green plastic is the cylinders and saddle, not shown here. The rest - basically the frame - is molded in black plastic, and was unpainted.
Friday, April 13, 2018
Green Steam
I had big plans for my Bachmann Spectrum 4-6-0. Ever since I had purchased it, it was going to be my branch line steamer, hauling a classic mixed train. But that's the fantasy...the reality is, it never worked right. I should have exchanged it right after I got it, back when Bachmann was still making it. Instead, it sat in its box for years before I decided to have a crack at fixing it. The newer model they've released apparently doesn't have the flaws mine has, though it does not have all the beautiful, separately applied details.
So when it didn't work I turned to a second option. A friend had given to me three steamers; vintage models by Aristo-Craft back when they made HO. These were "New One" models from Japan, thirty years older than the Spectrum engine. I was disappointed but not surprised when the pretty little 2-8-0 had the same flaw: the drivers were pressed onto the geared axle slightly less than perpendicular. That means the engine will have a lope; a wobble; a hitch in its getalong.
With both of these options off the table (and considerable time spent fiddling with them to try and make them better) I calmly decided I was going to do the right thing and purchase a reliable, dependable locomotive. I had watched throughout the Christmas season as a USRA 2-8-2 chugged around the tree hauling a string of hoppers. This stalwart steamer was made in Slovenia by Mehano for IHC.
I got on eBay and found that apparently I wasn't the only person looking for great performance at a reasonable price. But after a while I was able to land a deal on a 2-6-0, an ideal locomotive for hauling a freight or mixed train down a branch. Sure, the detail wasn't as nice as my Bachmann Spectrum, but it runs (well!) and is a great platform for detailing. If John Pryke considered it worthy of conversion into a New Haven K-1-B Mogul*, I figured I'd be able to do something with this little green steamer.
Upcoming blog posts will be progress updates on this project.
*see Model Railroader, August 2008, pg. 66
So when it didn't work I turned to a second option. A friend had given to me three steamers; vintage models by Aristo-Craft back when they made HO. These were "New One" models from Japan, thirty years older than the Spectrum engine. I was disappointed but not surprised when the pretty little 2-8-0 had the same flaw: the drivers were pressed onto the geared axle slightly less than perpendicular. That means the engine will have a lope; a wobble; a hitch in its getalong.
With both of these options off the table (and considerable time spent fiddling with them to try and make them better) I calmly decided I was going to do the right thing and purchase a reliable, dependable locomotive. I had watched throughout the Christmas season as a USRA 2-8-2 chugged around the tree hauling a string of hoppers. This stalwart steamer was made in Slovenia by Mehano for IHC.
I got on eBay and found that apparently I wasn't the only person looking for great performance at a reasonable price. But after a while I was able to land a deal on a 2-6-0, an ideal locomotive for hauling a freight or mixed train down a branch. Sure, the detail wasn't as nice as my Bachmann Spectrum, but it runs (well!) and is a great platform for detailing. If John Pryke considered it worthy of conversion into a New Haven K-1-B Mogul*, I figured I'd be able to do something with this little green steamer.
Upcoming blog posts will be progress updates on this project.
*see Model Railroader, August 2008, pg. 66
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)