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I just opened a kit I had hunted down (I try to trap all the grain elevator ones I can....well, there are two I have passed on), and I have scratch built a couple.  This is the Steam Era Structures "Village Feed and Grain".  There are 38 pages of

11"x17" instructions for this kit!  (the instructions filled 1/3rd of the box).  (I think this guy out of Cincinnati retired and is not offering kits any more.)  Has anybody built one of these?  I kitbashed one of his Village Stores, and I did not follow

the double wall construction recommended, but used 1/4" internal bracing which worked well. (I took a corner off to put

in drive-through gas pumps).  There is a photo of the prototype in this kit, which shows a wooden boxcar rolled up beside it, but I can't read the lettering on the building.  This structure is going to be HUGE, and, according to the prototype photo,

it has been truncated.  Kit is narrower, each of its three sections are shorter than they appear in the photo, so I'd like to

know where the prototype is, to get a side photo and maybe measurements.  I want to double the height of the elevator

part, anyway. The rear portion of the building has been moved into line, (siding stubbed at that section on the prototype), and shortened taking out a freight door.  There is a similar feed mill kit from Bar Mills that appears to build

a smaller, but somewhat similar building, for which I also will have to raise the elevator.  I think I have seen builds of that

one posted on here.

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mwb:  I was being facetious.  As I described, I did not find their "Village Store" to be

that difficult, and I am sure my ignoring the double walls on it sped up the process.

(now if an interior is planned, the interior walls should probably be incorporated)  I

really was "thinking on paper" as to whether I wanted to build this now, the Bar Mills one, or something else.  And as to whether I wanted to enlarge it to look more like the

photograph, which would probably guarantee it a life as a "shelf queen", too large to

put on the layout.  My scratchbuilt sugar beet plant and creosote plant are larger,

so size isn't scaring me.  (I would build that $1,000 kit of the Delores, Colo. ore mill,

but I won't pay that for it...would scratch build it first, or more likely, one of the

large mills that were up the Silverton Northern).

Mr. Graziano: The fellow from Cincinnati would set up at the March Meet O scale show

when it was up at the racetrack in NW Chicago (don't think he has made it to recent

ones close to Wheaton off Roosevelt Rd.), and display his kits.  Not so long ago he was offering these on eBay and I exchanged emails and found he was tired of doing them, and closing out.  He had the store, this mill, and several other unusual factory building kits.  I am sure there are unbuilt kits out there, and some will pop up at auction.

The hardest kit I have built and most difficult to get right, is a Mullet River caboose

kit, a whole lot smaller than these.

SES are interesting kits and not run-of-the-mill topics. That said, they're strictly old school, in that there is no laser cutting. All window holes have to be cut out. I built Tudlow's using the 2-layer method they suggested, and found it to be the toughest kit I ever built. I would buy more of them only because I like their subject matter. 

 

Buildings 05

 

I put an interior in the store front and installed light blocks in all the other spaces. It looks great, and is a representation of a real business in Cincy. Take your time and enjoy reading the instructions. When you're scratch-building there are no instructions.

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  • Buildings 05

I found Martin's small building a good start model, that touched a lot of the paint and assembly technique needed for more advanced building.  Nice to have a laser cut kit that doesn't required cutting filing and fitting of pieces.   Even some of the old old Korber models, with warp pieces/instruction of how to "un-warp", windows that didn't fit, and templates for the floor and truss parts were way beyond beginner. IMO.

Martin's (mwb) model.

 

Last edited by Mike CT
Originally Posted by colorado hirailer:

mwb:  I was being facetious. 

 

I wasn't,

 

The hardest kit I have built and most difficult to get right, is a Mullet River caboose kit, a whole lot smaller than these.

No room for error on those....

 

I found Martin's small building a good start model, that touched a lot of the paint and assembly technique needed for more advanced building.  Nice to have a laser cut kit that doesn't required cutting filing and fitting of pieces..

 

If there is interest in these, I think that there might be some of these kits left in storage although excavating them might prove "entertaining".

Last edited by mwb

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