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I have a new project of wanting to add guardrails to my road that runs along my river valley. Of all the guardrails that I remember the round wood posts that were painted white and black seem the best. 

I am looking for pictures of real ones for ideas on height and diameter of the posts, spacing, and with or without cables. Do they have to be pointed or slanted on top for drainage to look right?

I am thinking 1/4 inch dowel rods, painted white with a black band toward the bottom? Spaced about an inch apart and an inch tall? I would like to forget the cable, but If I did one should I drill holes through and string a stranded wire through each one?

I have about 6 feet to cover and would like to have as simple a solution as possible, but still look reasonably realistic.

Art

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Art, if I was going to do it I would drill holes so I could string wire through them. So many now are galvanized steel post. When I was younger I remember seeing round and square posts  some with wire attached to the front of them and others with the wire going through them. If you have extra material try some different examples to see what you like best.............Paul

450px-606.1_GUARDRAILHi Art, I know from 25 years of road service that all post for a guard rail must be blunt/ flat on top to reduce injury if a car happen to end up on top of the post. In general if we were putting up a 20' section of rail the post would be6' 3" spacing. The bottom of the rail should be no more then 31" high off the ground.

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Last edited by mike g.

For wooden posts...this is what I did on the old layout. Wooden guide posts are still in existence today but were certainly more prominent back in the 50's and 60's.

I would use a 6" to 8" diameter wood dowel (scale 1/8" - 3/16" dia).

Space them at 4' intervals on a curve (1" scale) and 8 to 10 feet on a straightaway (2" scale).

To look cool, I would run some stranded wire between them (4 to 8 strands) and then anchor the cable in the ground at each end.

Make them 3 to 4 feet tall (1"scale) and paint the top 2/3 a reflective white and the bottom 1/3 black.

Finally, provide a bevel on the top (one direction only).

Hope that helps with a wooden guide rail system.

Donald

 

Finally made a decision on my guardrails and have started constructing them.  I am using 3/16" dowel rod, painting them white with a black band on the lower third, and spacing them 1 1/2" apart.  The posts are 3/4" above the base or a scale three feet high.  I am also putting them on strips of 1/8" Masonite cut 1/2" wide and will then transfer these strips to the layout.  It is much easier to drill the holes and paint the posts at the workbench than on the layout as has been suggested.  I think that I can be satisfied without adding cable to the posts which will save a lot of work and what little hair I have left on my head. 

Thanks for all the great suggestions and advice.

Art

       Hello Art.

       I too wanted the old black and white posts I remember from long ago.

       I remember as a kid climbing and sitting on them. Ours, in Wisconsin were round on top.

       I went with 3/16" dowel and painted them half black, half white. Spacing was, that looks good enough for me. I drilled small holes in the bottom and super glued a cutoff pin in the bottom. My scenery here is static grass with pink foam underneath so I could just push them in wherever.

                                                                                            Dan

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Chugman posted:



I am looking for pictures of real ones for ideas on height and diameter of the posts, spacing, and with or without cables. Do they have to be pointed or slanted on top for drainage to look right?t

Here you go!  Black Locust posts, slight bevel on top, painted white, 2 eye bolts through threaded with braided steel cable.  Wait 30 years, dig up, invert and re-install metal parts.

 

They do bring back "old" memories. I used dowels. I cut off track nails and made a small hole in dowel and tapped the nails in. Once I had glued the dowels in the "ground", I wrapped heavy thread around the black track nails from post to post. If you can do it on the work bench rather than the layout - that's the best idea. I did as much of my layout construction that way as I could.

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I remember a vacation we took in 1961 where we traveled Highway 61 from Duluth to Port Arthur/Fort Williams which is now Thunder Bay, Ontario.  Along that route we saw some gorgeous scenery from light houses to waterfalls.  It was in late September and it was cold, rainy, and foggy a good share of the way.   I also remember seeing stretches of that road that had guardrails that were wood posts and painted white with black trim.  I have pictures that I took of them somewhere, but haven't found them yet.  they would be Kodachrome slides.

I did run across a post card of a section of the highway near Red Wing, MN that is pretty cool in my opinion.

redwingpostcard

These posts were painted half white and half black with a single cable.  I have always loved the stark contrast between the white on the posts and the surroundings.  The tops were rounded in this picture.

Art

 

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Last edited by Chugman

Here in WV posts were bevel top, all white. Steel cable was run through the posts and eye bolts in different locations. Dad worked on the roads around home in the 40's and 50's. A few years ago he gave me a 'post marker' they used in the 40's. It a glass disc about 2 inches around. It contained some type, small, of uranium that made it glow at night!!! They were removed not long after being installed.....it would be cool to model this with a strand of fiber optic in the post!! 

mike g. posted:

450px-606.1_GUARDRAILHi Art, I know from 25 years of road service that all post for a guard rail must be blunt/ flat on top to reduce injury if a car happen to end up on top of the post. In general if we were putting up a 20' section of rail the post would be6' 3" spacing. The bottom of the rail should be no more then 31" high off the ground.

 

Attenuators at the end of a guide rail run,  no more turn downs.  ;-) 

 

 

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