You must be really bored, because you are reading a forum on a guy building a structure…[;)]
For the past two evenings, I have been working on assembling a Model Power Silverado Station kit!
PS My first time using an airbrush!
Here’s what I modified:
I painted the roof a grimy black, the walls Oxide red, the inside of the walls black, and the concrete bricks concrete color.
(no pics, sorry)
I modifed the roof light by painting the rim yellow, and removing/replacing the molded white light with a real light! (I also added incandecent bulbs inside for building lighting).
I originally used a bigger bulb, but it stuck out too much and I couldn’t fit the roof on with the big bulb, so I tried to bend it, and broke it. That’s why you see a smaller bulb inside a bigger glass bulb thingy…
I replaced the original poster/ads & signs with my own that I found on the internet and shruck the pics down to size. Luckily, my parents FINALLY bought a color printer, so I got the posters & signs in color [:D]
Original:
Notice how each picture is not ideal. I model 1950s so no Amtrak, Pepsi sign too big, the poster with “car” is boring, they spelled “toilet” as “toilett” (never seen a restroom with a sign saying “toilet”), I wish the office sign didn’t have an arrow, etc… The 2 I cut out on the bottom are okay, but I didnt really like them.
Your project really impressed me Charles, so much I went online to find a kit. There isn’t much information available on the kit, the only size I could find is 12” x 10”. That seems too large for a small HO station. Is that the size of the box or the built up station?
Mel
Modeling the early to mid 1950s SP in HO scale since 1951
Thanks Charles! That helps a lot, that will easily fit in the space for my station. I made all of my structures to be easily removable. I have two stations that I can set in place and this will be number three.
Thanks
Mel
Modeling the early to mid 1950s SP in HO scale since 1951
There only a few (rectanglar) windows on the model, I see no reason why you couldn’t mask them with painters-tape (blue, green, frog yellow, whatever) and give the station a few coats of dull-coat for a matte finish.
Also, “Toilett” is close to German “Toilette”, and these sort of kits were normally produced in Central/Eastern Europe in the past.
Finally, the extra detail parts including with these Model Power (and AHM and Pola etc. - whoever had the molds and dies that week) were often the most useful parts…
A well done job, I think I would have gone for a brick red for the chimney.
The facilities sign well over here that is what the sign would say toilet with the male and female pictogram’s on the sign and the disabeld one as well.
I think that clearly illistrates the choose signs carefully to make sure they fit the area modeled and the era.