Weekend Photo Fun - April 23rd through April 25th 2021

Welcome to Weekend Photo Fun## April 23, 2021 through April 25, 2021### All Are Welcome!

Hello again and happy weekend to everybody.

I have a nifty new purchase to share this week, quite a happy eBay find for me.

It has been pointed out that I have very few roadnames that are represented in my Fleet Of Nonsense on multiple similar freight cars. Other than the home road SGRR, I only have three roadnames with two boxcars, and then I have a pretty good sized fleet for the DAWDLE AND DELAY.

It is just impossible to find good quality freight cars predecorated for ficticious roadnames. Very few of my decal trades resulted in multiple sets of custom decals.

Imagine my excitement when I found these. A beautiful pair of NEW ENGLAND BERKSHIRE AND WESTERN 40 foot boxcars by C&BT Shops with different road numbers! Now I have another pair of beautiful make-believe freight cars, and I do not even need to paint them.

Thanks for starting WPF Kevin. Great looking boxcars. This item may help. The second paragraph mentions your boxcars.

https://poly.rpi.edu/opinion/2019/01/last-train-for-troy-rensselaer-model-railroad-in-danger/

My contribution is ‘A little scene’ Margaret Griffiths and her daughter.

David

Good morning

Thanks for getting the weekend off to a great start with another WPF Kevin. I like your New England Berkshire And Western box cars. Always fun to get some new hard to find rolling stock.

Love the bench scene in front of the sheep farm David. I think each one of your scenes tells a story.

I’m looking forward to getting bridge number six done. The inner styrene and cap added to the gaurd wall.

It will be the only one of the eight bridges that are finished. The other five are built but need to be painted.

Looking forward to seeing some more great stuff this weekend.

TF

Kevin, Love those NEB&W boxcars. Never knew that anyone made those.

David, nice mini scene.

Intersting bridge, TF. Nice work.

My contribution…Finally getting back to my N scale Kato U36C kitbash. It took so long because I finally decided what to model! I am focusing on the SCL / L&N / Family Lines era. Not my best paint job, but I’m happy with it. Still need to add a little weathering to the body, although I did weather the grills slightly. Painted using Model Master, PolyScale, and Tamiya paints.

Good morning from suuny and cool Northeast Ohio!

Kevin, thanks for starting us out, nice looking boxcars, never knew that they were offered.

David, neat looking little mini-scene!

TF, all your bridges are coming along they really look good.

TW, good looking engine, I will be doing one of those in HO with the extended dynamic brake box on the hood.

I got a couple of projects done this week!

Lambert brass caboose, painted with Floquil Jade Green and lettered with Microscale Decals.

Intermountain Pullman Standarad 60’ Boxcar Kit, painted with Scalecoat II ATSF Mineral Brown and Silver Paints, then lettered with Microscale Decals. The NP purchased 6 of these boxcars for pool service to the Pontiac plant in Flint Michigan, the assignment was quickly painted over and they ended up in general service on the NP hauling paper, wood and wood pulp.

An Athearn FMC 60’ Boxcar kit almost 100% complete, will head to the paint shop and decaling this week.

Rivarossi U25C engines with a string of various H39 and H37 Hoppers (including the H39 that I finished last week) on the Strongsville Club Layout.

Thanks for looking!

Rick Jesionowski

Beautiful work all

All I’ve got are fast track switches, no photo atm, but im up to about 4 functional ones

Wow, great start folks! I managed to re-motor and install a decoder in my Selkirk. Better yet, I was successful tweaking it to allow it to run on my 22" curves. Extra weight on the front truck, and a bit of dremel work on the rear truck made it work. I also had one offending turnout that caused derailments - fixed that too with some filing. Anyway, here she is pushing the Hudson:

20210420_220143b on Flickr

David: I like the scene with the woman on the park bench. It is simple, peaceful, and looks right.

Fiddler: The rock painting on the new bridge looks great in the photographs you shared. You really did a great job on these.

Chuck: Your locomotive really looks good. You did a great job on this one. When my friend Randy started his N scale layout back in 1992 it wa supposed to be SCL/FAMILY LINES, but lack of equipment availability made him change to NORFOLK SOUTHERN/CSX.

Rick: That NORTHERN PACIFIC boxcar is amazing! The large monad herald and the “NP” both make it into a very striking model. Beautiful.

Jimmy: I am looking forward to seeing pictures of your trackwork.

Simon: Congratulations on the xuccessful modifications to make your magnificent locomotive operable on your layout.

-Kevin

Thanks, Kevin, TF, Chuck, Rick.

Simple, easy scenes that have nothing to do with the railroad. Just what I like; little scenes we see (most) every day. Hopefully bringing it all together.

David

I understand that.

One of my sub-hobbies is making these tiny dioramas. These can be placed and moved about the layouts to make scenes more interesting.

-Kevin

-Kevin: Thanks for the start to WPF. Cool boxcars. David’s contribution increases the interest.

David: Great scene. A little vignette. Make up your own story to fit the scene.

TF: The bridges look good.

trwroute: Great looking engine. If its N-scale, great photos too.

Rick: Love the NYC caboose. Thats what they should look like! Nice boxcars too. The amount of detail you incorporate is amazing. Nice photo too.

Simon: Nice engines. Unusual.

Kevin: the mini-dioramas are a great idea!

Not much new this week on the BRVRR. Here is the next candidate for lighting, interior and passengers for my George Bush train. Can someone identify the type of car? Observation/Lounge/Sleeper? Some combination?

Took some time to run trains this week. Santa Fe #3761 belongs to one of my grandsons and rarely gets to run. Here it is at the head of a short passenger train of mixed heavyweight and modernized cars.

Keep the photos and ideas coming guys. Thanks to you WPF is always the best thread of the week.

Kevin, once again thanks for hosting this weekend’s Photo Fun. Nice that you found something you really wanted with the boxcars.

David, you’re an expert staging small scenes like that. I’m wondering, since the daughter seems to have her hands on her hips, she and mom may have just had a disagreement.

TF, it will be great to see how this viaduct looks once you get track and elevations added. Good work.

Chuck, nice paint job on the Kato locomotive. Great detail for an N scale loco.

Rick, love your cars. I especially like the Northern Pacific boxcar. My great uncle worked for NP in Tacoma. As a kid, I always liked the yin yang symbol on NP cars.

Simon, that’s a nice photo of the two locomotives coming off the bridge.

Allan, I love passenger trains. I can’t identify the car, though. Let us know how your lighting and passengers look when you finish.

I don’t have a photo, but I have a 45 second video of my N Scale crossing signal. I can’t tell you how much blood, sweat, and tears went into this.

When I first began the project, I was just going to buy a signal. Then Mel inspired me to try my hand at making the signal instead. With a very thin tube, tiny LEDs, the smallest washers from the hardware store, I put together the signal.

Unfortunately, that was the easy part. I got some Arduino stuff and began to learn how to program the lights. I tried copying some code, but nothing worked correctly.

Finally, I stopped building, and subscribed to several Youtube channels on how to write Arduino code. That took some weeks, but I finally got enough basics to program the nano chip to run the lights.

I also realized once I got everything set up, that I had the undertrack sensors too close to the crossing. The lights barely come on by the time the train hits the crossing. I’ve learned.

F

Randy by Bear, on Flickr

I left this one, to think about overnight, and while I think it’s a suitable tribute, if it is thought to be inappropriate, I’ll take it down.

The Bear.

That’s a funny one, and I think Randy would be laughing. He may be right now.

I am not very good at interpretting social norms, but I think it is perfect.

-Kevin

Randy would love it! Good one Bear!

Kevin : Thanks for kicking us off this weekend! As this year’s president of the NEB&W, I am so glad that despite our two year abscence from the modeling scene, our railroad still makes people excited!

David : Lovely little scene, and since that article came out over 2 years ago now, I can confirm that we are most certainly not gone and if all goes to plan, hopefully we’ll be able to move into the new space that’s been made for us in the fall!

Fiddler : Great looking bridge! If the rest of the bridges turn out like that, you’ll have a great looking set!

Chuck : Great looking unit! Glad you settled on something to model, took me a few years to decide as well!

Rick : Those pieces of rolling stock look great!

Jimmy : Any progress is good progress! Hope the switches are coming along well.

snjroy : Beautiful locomotives!

Allan : Always great to take a break and simply run some trains! Hope you had a good time.

John : That crossing came out so well! Great to see that progress from last time!

Bear : Didn’t really know Randy well since I’ve been on and off when it comes to interacting on the forums here, but I think based on what I know of him he’d be glad to be remembered on here.

To bring things back around to the start of the thread, we’ve made some pretty good progress on the NEB&W’s Walthers National Model Railroad Build-Off piece. The kits are looking good, with the bridge and country store kits being basically done, and the houses coming along well, so the only kit left to start work on is the massive coal company kit, which we’ll start in this week, and our base is pretty much done and ready to start being sculpted, sceniced, and have models placed.

Can you give me any information about this roadname, the OLDENSBURG AND LAKE RICHELIEU?

I received these decals from a local modeler that moved down from New York, and he said they came from the NEB&W club. Is any of this true?

I painted these two freight cars using the decal set he gave me.

-Kevin

Hi, Allan

Some combination is right. These cars, two of which were built by Pullman for the Pennsylvania Railroad in Broadway Limited service had two master rooms and one bedroom, buffet, lounge, observation.

http://abpr.railfan.net/abprphoto.cgi?september98/09-14-98/prr-towerview.jpg

Mountain View was painted in sky blue for the 1969 Golden Spike Centennial train so it would have seen some use on the Union Pacific.

Tower View is, I believe, located at the Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania.

Great contributions this weekend, everyone. I’ll be back later with a few photos.

Cheers, Ed

Yup, those are ours! Basically, the O&LR is our analog for the Ogdensburgh and Lake Champlain. Its a branch line under Central Vermont control that interchanges with the NEB&W at Alburgh, but only appears on our layout as a branch of the branch line in Chateaugay. These facebook posts should help in giving you more information :

https://www.facebook.com/NEBandW/posts/1294526500633889

https://www.facebook.com/NEBandW/posts/1138775719542302

https://www.facebook.com/NEBandW/posts/1049806555105886

Hope this helps! Glad to help out!