Skip to main content

I have been working on one of my grain elevators and thought I would share a picture of it.  I have had a large concrete grain elevator that I started scratch building a few years ago.  I haven't liked where I had it and decided to try a new location.  It is now on a narrow strip of land (9" wide) between my double-track mainline and my single interchange track that connects the western end of my upper branch line.  With it's double silos there wasn't enough room left for a service track to facilitate loading of grain hoppers.  So I made an extension of 12 single silos.  I really like the look of as it now has more of that massive Midwestern grain elevator look like I have seen in central Kansas.

 

 

grainelevatoraddition3

Attachments

Images (1)
  • grainelevatoraddition3
Last edited by Chugman
Original Post

Replies sorted oldest to newest

Having a pesky six-year old inside me who often channels his bizarre ideas, I've thought of modeling an exploding grain silo. Unfortunately, I don't have any place to put a set of silos and elevator and all, but it would be cool and a nice emergency scene to model/play with.

 

 When I was a kid (1960s?) I saw one in western Kansas/eastern Colorado about a week after it had happened.  My grandfather was a local judge who had to go inspect and certify the damage or something and I went with him.  The grain dust inside a half-empty one had exploded - the silo looked like a ruptured firecracker - concrete rumble everywhere.  No one had been killed, but Wow!  Years later i saw a video of cirvil engineers trying to blow up an old grain elevator.  It defied their efforts with dynamite: Grain dust can be a powerful explosive - it tore the one I saw to pieces. .  

 

 

Thanks' for all your comments.

 

Harry - I will have to see if I can find pictures of the one at Hershey, PA  Does it have any connection to the famous chocolate company?

 

Coloradohirailer - I think that one you are talking about is at Hutchinson, KS.  That is the type that I have in mind, but not to that extent of course.  They have very large elevators in central Kansas to handle all the wheat harvest.  I may call mine CENTRAL KANSAS COOP.

 

Ricky - I used 1/4 Masonite on the bottom and illustration board or Strathmore board on the tops.

 

Lee - I had forgotten how dangerous elevators are with the grain dust being so explosive. 

 

Brian - I am pretty happy with the overall looks so far and think that this will work well for this area of my layout.  It was meant to be a rural area and what's more rural Midwest than big elevators?  This is the country that the real UP and BNSF travel through to the west coast.

 

Art

Which of these elevators in Hutchinson, Kansas is the "BIG ONE"?

 

DSCF9547

It's non of these in the background picture.

 

Must be the one we are standing next too.

113

120

This last picture is of the end of the "BIG ONE" which is many silo's wide and over 1/2 mile long.  With some of the smaller elevators in the background.

119

Enid, Oklahoma and Fort Worth, Texas have very large elevators also.

Attachments

Images (4)
  • DSCF9547
  • 113
  • 120
  • 119

Hi Art,

Storing grain in there for the Kraft Macaroni and cheese? Ha Ha.... Since Kraft separated in 2012 from Nabisco, I no longer am employed by your former and my former company, Kraft. I ended on with Nabisco. Had no choice but I'm riding it out to the sunset to almost retirement. Just maybe, I can spend the time like you building a really nice layout like yours.

I always enjoy your pictures of progress.

Thanks.

I really love big, concrete grain elevators (Wow, AGHRMAtt - 2000 feet!) - in addition to just being very impressive on their own right, they look like an ammunition clip for some impossibly big automatic gun or something. Growing up in the west/mid-west I saw a lot of them.  I don't really have room for one on my layout.  I might be able to fit one as a shallow backdrop in - would love to, but I'm not sure I have even enough depth for that . . .

 

Here in NC, where we live now, we have only a few big concrete silo elevators - I see them from time to time but not nearly as many.  We have a lot of sheet-metal oines as in the photo below, nice no doubt, and probably fun to build as a model, too, but just not a "grain elevator" in my world . . .

Thanks for the nice comments everyone.

 

Keith - The "Big One" is the 1/2 mile long one in Hutchinson, KS.  But there are so many "big" ones that it's hard to tell sometimes.  Great pictures!

 

Ted - So you will have an Oreo in your retirement stocking instead of Mac & Cheese?

 

Apple & Spud Line - I will share basic construction in a separate post.  It is very easy though.

 

Matt - It looks like a lot of us have a love of grain elevators.  Every small town in the Midwest seems to have an elevator so we can model so many different types and styles.  A Midwestern town just doesn't look right without one.

 

Ironhorseman - Beautiful picture of the elevator in Seattle!

 

Lee - There are so many ways to find space for one.  The area of this one is 9" wide, that's the width of an Ameritown building.  That was too wide for a track beside my double wide silo version, so I added a single silo extension that works well in 4 1/2".  I am going to cut single silos in half and mount them on my backdrop at my town of Ruthven.  So I think they can be worked just about anywhere.

 

Art

Originally Posted by Ironhorseman:

I've always liked the Port 86 Elevator layout in Seattle, would love to model this one but I'd have to switch to z scale.  One interesting fact is it has the capability to load directly from a train to a ship.

 

 

 

Good one!  My sister used to live in that tall white condo (415 Mercer)sitting over the south end of the silos.  She had a great view of all the activity there.  Modeling that elevator and all the train sights between there and the stadiums would make for a cool layout!

Alan - Thanks.  You did a great job of capturing the big grain elevator complex look.

 

Ed Kaz & Apple & Spud Line - I was going to wait and take a few pics as I completed the construction of the addition, but it is so simple that I can easily describe it. 

 

I use 3 1/2" plastic PVC sewer piper from Home Depot or Menards for the silos.  Make a jig and saw the pipe to exactly the same lengths, I cut mine at 14" tall.  I cut a base of 1/8" Masonite and glue the pipes to it with construction adhesive.  Cut a top for the silos of rigid illustration board using the same adhesive.  You can also use Titebond or Gorilla glue for the top.  I sprayed mine with flat off white paint to represent silos that are painted white but weathered.  The structure is made of foamboard with wood bracing inside.  I made my windows by using wood strips cut and fit into the openings but you could use plastic windows more easily.

 

Art

Last edited by Chugman
Post
×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×
×