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And lastly . I have been filling in the aisle with removable scenery boards here is the latest board this entire aisle can be removed in minutes if needed. The three boards with the electrical towers on them can all be removed.

Nothing is finished yet I intend to build a power substation on one of the boards.

Roo. 

 

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Beyond wonderful, ROO, and I know what I am seeing there, having lived the 40's - 60's in my hometown Pittsburgh area. In fact, I worked as a common laborer at National Tube, McKeesport, PA, for one very hot summer, earning extra money, as a teenager, for college. It was so hot that, even though we were young and strong, we had to work for 15min and then sit for 15min, etc. If we did not rest every other quarter hour like that, we were fired (no pun intended) for endangering ourselves in such hot conditions.

I love your creativity, there, and especially appreciate your realistically stressing the profound presence of long lines of trains within the precincts of such a mill.DSC01115

FrankM

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Last edited by Moonson

Thank you all.

Frank. That is a great photo of the ingot being lifted out of the soaking pit I would have dearly loved to have had the space to fully detail inside my buildings but with O scale in the room I have it's just impossible.

Here is another photo from yesterday. It's a quiet time at Waterside yard, this yard is the interchange yard for the Mill. All the trains for the mill go through this yard usually it is jammed with cars of all descriptions the Lackawanna loco moving a Mill Gondola of furnace scrap must be on loan to the mill this job is usually handled by the Blue (one shown in the photo with a low clearance roof) Republic Steel Switchers. Of course Big John might have grabbed the nearest loco to do this job maybe! A slab train has just pulled a cut of flats out of the Blooming Mill this train will then move forward to the tracks on the left and make it's way to the Rolling Mill where the slabs will be converted into Coils of steel for a customer.  Roo.

 

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Joe: the towers are glued to the boards the first board is all we remove on operating days if I need to get to a derailment (which is rare) I just slide the others along and leave them on the runners. (See pictures)

Hokie 71: No I have never worked in the Steel Industry I do buy endless books for research.

Thanks. Roo.

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Bill Chaplik posted:

Looks like you're having a blast.

In more ways than one!!

Thanks everyone I will post some photos of the progress. The "foundry" is supposed to be a pipe factory as well as a foundry gives me an excuse to run some Bulkhead flats, Hot metal cars, depressed centre flats, lots of action, looking forward to finishing this section have to take it easy today my back is playing up after leaning for hours over the layout yesterday. Take care and watch your back! Roo.

 

Despite a sore back I'm happy with the progress so far.

I am making a sign for the building at the moment. the workshop is bashed from a Heljan kit will eventually have a fully detailed interior in fact if you lift the building up there are a pile of detail items inside waiting, good place to store them. The floor is not glued down so I can detail the interior of the workshop at the bench. 

Because we operate the layout every week and enjoy switching there is not a lot of room for details like pipes and castings sitting in the yards the tracks come first the scenery second. The crane needs some streaks of rust and dirt on it along with everything else ! Roo.  

 

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Last edited by Roo

Well...It's summertime, it's painting time, so I go down to my favourite hobby shop to buy a dozen cans of rattle gun paint only to find it's closing down!

Sad he was only 15 minutes away no train stuff but plenty of paint I suppose it's the same the world over the internet is killing off the trad shop. Roo.

Last edited by Roo
mike g. posted:

ROO, Frank is right, you cant get more real than that! Wonderful work!

Mike, You are one of the more delightful voices on this forum that I always make a point of reading. So, when I see that we are in agreement about another hobbyist's work, that is a bonus, as far as I am concerned. You seem like a really good guy, so I am glad to have been in your company here.

FrankM

Moonson posted:
mike g. posted:

ROO, Frank is right, you cant get more real than that! Wonderful work!

Mike, You are one of the more delightful voices on this forum that I always make a point of reading. So, when I see that we are in agreement about another hobbyist's work, that is a bonus, as far as I am concerned. You seem like a really good guy, so I am glad to have been in your company here.

FrankM

Thanks Frank, I try to be positive as this is spose to be fun! Plus there is so many great people here with such great skills! The best part is the sharing of thoughts and ideas! It really means a lot to me getting this comment from you!

Moonson posted:

ROO, about the "Publicity shot" : When I have to lean forward and squint to get a closer look at the scene (above) to determine if it's great modeling or real-life.... Wow. And WOW again... that's great modeling!!!!!!!!!

FrankM

mike g. posted:

ROO, Frank is right, you cant get more real than that! Wonderful work!

Thanks Frank. I've looked into your history and you are a great modeller yourself so coming from you that is a compliment that I appreciate.

Now Mike I notice you were in Artillery corp. In 1970 when I was based at the Australian task force at Nui Dat (small hill) the Americans had a couple of big guns in the centre and every second or third night they would fire a couple of rounds 10 miles into Nth Vietnam. You would be in your hoochie asleep and all of a sudden Boom! are we under attack? No it's just those crazy yanks firing their big guns.

The guns had a type of bulldozer blade on the rear dug into the dirt to absorb the recoil and were on tracks.  Roo. 

 

Last edited by Roo

Thanks MELGAR.

Here are a couple of photos I snapped yesterday two shows Erie 435 switching Valley Pipe the third shows the other end of this district on a very quiet day. Next week we are installing a new Control Panel for this district which has a number of new industries plus a passenger station with a single team track. Most of the industries here are connected with the Steel Mill in some way like Valley Pipe and Forge receives among other trains Hot Metal trains there is also a Slag reclamation plant and a scrap yard that delivers scrap to the Basic Oxygen Furnace (BOF) the interchange yard has only three tracks (no room for more!) enough for the trains. There is a Locomotive that is rostered here permanently just for switching and making up trains. Roo.

 

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Roo posted:

Publicity shot for Valley Pipe and Forge. Roo.

More fantastic work!

Roo posted
Now Mike I notice you were in Artillery corp. In 1970 when I was based at the Australian task force at Nui Dat (small hill) the Americans had a couple of big guns in the centre and every second or third night they would fire a couple of rounds 10 miles into Nth Vietnam. You would be in your hoochie asleep and all of a sudden Boom! are we under attack? No it's just those crazy yanks firing their big guns.

The guns had a type of bulldozer blade on the rear dug into the dirt to absorb the recoil and were on tracks.  Roo. 

This Neville? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TUs6q1VjauE

The Army wanted us to make them NBC capable then dropped the project. Somewhere I have pictures of the front 3/4 gun enclosure designed to protect the standing crew from rifle fire.

That's the one! Love the video way to go mate! The ground used to shake when those things were fired.

We worked with you guys and US gunships supported us in SVN.  Aussies have worked along side Americans in most modern wars.

Thanks everyone for your kind words about the layout I will have more photos soon. These photos are the new control panel ready to install next week. Roo.DSC01228DSC01229

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I thought I had more coil cars. After a post by Roo, I went down to look and I only found one by MTH. I got lucky and found another at a great price right before Christmas. Deichman's Model Train Depot had them and I wish I had got them all. I am thankful for the one I got. I will get more as I can. The Atlas cars are another great release in O scale for me.

 Anyways when I see pictures like these above, I have to pursue making it on my RR. I visited Republic Steel, and Bethlehem Steel when I was younger. The huge scale of those places amazed me then. Roo's layout took me right back to my youth and seeing those sights again.

 I am fond of tank cars so I will try to have a facility for those, along with my other favorites like auto carriers. Now with the steel cars in my sights, I may need a bigger house or I'll have to get creative and compress some type of scene. I am jealous of the quality work posted here and I think it will influence my layout moving forward.

Just a bit of info you may use or discard as you see fit.  On the prototype railroad the "control panels" were and are still called model boards.  As a modeler I am in favor of using prototype terminology where possible to both increase realism and historical accuracy of modeling efforts.  As an aside, I was once a Block Operator at Morris Tower in Morrisville PA, where we sent and received frequent transfer runs between Morrisville freight yard and United States Steel's Fairless Works.  Part of a 1979-2011 railroad career.

Bill

Thank you all.

MELGAR and members. Years ago when digital cameras came out I could not afford one at the time so my daughter who worked in a large cleaning firm borrowed their camera (with permission from the owner!) she worked in the office doing the payroll for 90 cleaners.

From that day onwards I kept a record of almost everything I built and still have most of the photos which now run into hundreds.

You asked about Brooklyn I spent 10 years researching the railroads in New York Harbor that layout is now long gone i will start a new thread to show you what happened to it. I will call it "The Destruction Of Bay Ridge Harbor" I was keeping it for a magazine article but I have stopped that phase of my life age is catching up and I have to many other things to do. Roo.

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