Really nice work, Erik!
Jeff C
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Really nice work, Erik!
Jeff C
Erik,
I'd like to ask you a few questions off sight. Can you email me? I tried yours but it kept bouncing back. Hey, I'm an ol' phart.
Thank you!
Really nice work, Erik!
Jeff C
This thread is very interesting. Thank you to share!
I've just a question: what was the maximum length for a trailer in 1959/1962 please?
Ahhh, Lionel is offering piggyback equipment in "scale O". Excellent. Will they be offering other road names beside Rio Grande Motorways, as they had in the past? "Piggybacking" on the discussion of Division Point brass, I find navigating the Lionel website to be a similar experience as was had by Pleistocene-era animals stopping by the Labrea Tarpits for a drink!
The trailers weren't 55 feet. The entire vehicle (tractor and trailer was). The trailers were anywhere from twenty-something short single-axle doubles used with "Rocky Mountain Doubles" to 40 foot tandem axle trailers in the late 50's to early 60's.
The restricting factor were the state laws that limited the length overall of both tractor and trailer. Thus trailer lengths for west coast roads could be different from east coast roads.
55' for the trailer + the truck. Ok. That's clear.
Sorry I hadn't understood. I'm not from the USA and I have to learn.
Many thanks!
55' for the trailer + the truck. Ok. That's clear.
Sorry I hadn't understood. I'm not from the USA and I have to learn.
Many thanks!
Quite welcome! If you want to look at lots of US trucks go to the hanks truck pictures web site. Many really neat pictures from the 50's through the present... Like our trains here, our trucks are most unique though I am fond of Australian Road trains.
OR you can just look at Eric's Ringsby and Rio Grande work on this thread.
55' for the trailer + the truck. Ok. That's clear.
Sorry I hadn't understood. I'm not from the USA and I have to learn.
Many thanks!
Quite welcome! If you want to look at lots of US trucks go to the hanks truck pictures web site. Many really neat pictures from the 50's through the present... Like our trains here, our trucks are most unique though I am fond of Australian Road trains.
OR you can just look at Eric's Ringsby and Rio Grande work on this thread.
Erik
Thanks for starting this thread and keeping it going with all that historical information and photos
You have inspired me to get a few F39's so I can add some dual piggy back 35' trailer flats to the single trailer F30D flats my Truc Train
John Sethian (ps note spelling!)
Erik
Everything is scratch built: The screw jack stands (they actually work!), cross beams, chains, the hooks, the deck tie downs, the counterbalance springs on the ramps, the crash posts, even the turnbuckles. I inserted a short hidden section EZ wire into the chain to keep everything taught. I also machined the rub rails from brass I beams to replicate what was used by the Pennsy. I added a few decals and underlined the work Pennsylvania to make the cars look more Pennsy like. They have a couple of inaccuracies, but I captured the flavor of the F30D.
I wrote an extensive article in O Scale Trains on this. See issue #63, July August 2012
Like you I made custom decals for the trailers. I also modified the trailer sides (horizontal ribs, or rivets, or smooth sides) to replicate the prototype
John Sethian your work is so much better than Erik's!
Erik your work is so much better than John's.
hey i got an idea send me 1 each of your cars and then i'll be able to judge the winner.
SMALL PRINT all entries become the property of the judge.
seriously this thread and the modeling here is one of the best. 2 rail modeling at its finest!!!!!
Erik
Everything is scratch built: The screw jack stands (they actually work!), cross beams, chains, the hooks, the deck tie downs, the counterbalance springs on the ramps, the crash posts, even the turnbuckles. I inserted a short hidden section EZ wire into the chain to keep everything taught. I also machined the rub rails from brass I beams to replicate what was used by the Pennsy. I added a few decals and underlined the work Pennsylvania to make the cars look more Pennsy like. They have a couple of inaccuracies, but I captured the flavor of the F30D.
I wrote an extensive article in O Scale Trains on this. See issue #63, July August 2012
Like you I made custom decals for the trailers. I also modified the trailer sides (horizontal ribs, or rivets, or smooth sides) to replicate the prototype
Erik,
continue to give us the informations. I learn a lot. This subject is one of my best loved.
I've made a TOFC train starting from flat cars (Micro-Trains) and styrene using CMW trailers and scratchbuilts ones but it was in N scale. In O scale it's really better.
Many thanks to share.
Jack
Erik
Everything is scratch built: The screw jack stands (they actually work!), cross beams, chains, the hooks, the deck tie downs, the counterbalance springs on the ramps, the crash posts, even the turnbuckles. I inserted a short hidden section EZ wire into the chain to keep everything taught. I also machined the rub rails from brass I beams to replicate what was used by the Pennsy. I added a few decals and underlined the work Pennsylvania to make the cars look more Pennsy like. They have a couple of inaccuracies, but I captured the flavor of the F30D.
I wrote an extensive article in O Scale Trains on this. See issue #63, July August 2012
Like you I made custom decals for the trailers. I also modified the trailer sides (horizontal ribs, or rivets, or smooth sides) to replicate the prototype
Erik,
continue to give us the informations. I learn a lot. This subject is one of my best loved.
I've made a TOFC train starting from flat cars (Micro-Trains) and styrene using CMW trailers and scratchbuilts ones but it was in N scale. In O scale it's really better.
Many thanks to share.
Jack
Ahhh, Lionel is offering piggyback equipment in "scale O". Excellent. Will they be offering other road names beside Rio Grande Motorways, as they had in the past? "Piggybacking" on the discussion of Division Point brass, I find navigating the Lionel website to be a similar experience as was had by Pleistocene-era animals stopping by the Labrea Tarpits for a drink!
Great work Erik!
I like the weathering on the Herris trailer. The cars and the other trailer are good too.
I think weathering is very important for realism. The bright colors and the plastic are "toylike" if you don't weather all. But it's only my idea.
Small informational tidbit: noted in the 2014 Northern Pacific Ry Historical Association calendar was that the NP began TOFC service in 1954, with Raymond Loewy colors on the trailers. 1954 would be well within mainline steam operation on the NP, for us steam fans.
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