Who makes wooden HO crossbucks with signage appropriate for a U.S. railroad in the transition era, c. 1947-55? I’m not finding any on an Internet search.
I’m looking for ones such as these on the Rix Products website with numerals, etc.
Better still, I’d like to make them myself using scale lumber and decals. I believe I once read an article in MRM or a Kalmbach book on how to make them, but cannot find it now. Any ideas?
This can be one of those coffee stirrer scratchbuilds. I used to collect these, all kinds, wooden sticks and plastic tubes. It’s perfect material for crossbucks. You hit the nail on the head with the decals, too.
Cheap craft paint will give you a realistic flat finish that will look fine too.
I add a little distress and age weathering to some of the ones I use. On some it is better to clip the sign off the thin plastic post and use a more durable support made of bronze wire or spring wire.
Well, it’s nice to see that your link here actually goes to a suitable site. However, on the other forum, where you posted the same request, I’ve replied with some info that may address your needs.
J L Innovative Design has a number of styles including the posts that were different back in an earlier era. I do not believe they are plastic but cannot swear to it. They use a lot of paper and wood in their products.
By the way just a couple of years ago I was considerably surprised to be driving through Byron IL and came across several sets of the old outdated 30 degree crossbucks rather than the 90 degree type you see today. BTS has a model
In case you might feel like going a step further, I got these from Oregon Rail Supply. They were quite inexpensive, and came with a pair of independently wired LEDs, two per crossbuck.
I powered these with Rob Paisley’s detection and flasher circuit, which works quite well with the optical photocells supplied. I also built a pair of crossing gates from NJ International, with similar detection.
Yes, I think that is the catalog number. LEDs are included, but the detection and flasher circuit is not.
These do not run off track power, so DC or DCC doesn’t matter. They do require 12V DC for the circuit. I happened to use a lot of 12V DC anyway, so I just wired it in.
I bought the circuit prebuilt, but you can save a few dollars by soldering it together yourself. The crossbucks need assembly and painting. I forget if the LED wires were long enough or I had to use some thin magnet wire to do these.
I see that Circuitron has several types of detection and flasher circuits for various uses. The information is a bit overwhelming at first, so I’ll need more time to read it thoroughly. What other suppliers are there for these systems?
Is such a circuit board system required to detect trains and operate the lights/LEDs so that they flash or can they be wired more simply, say to a second power pack (the one that controls my Tort