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Some construction photos

Janes Grain elevator 002

The silos are 3 inch diam tubes 24 inches high. Spent many a long hour sanding these things.

Janes Grain elevator [1)

Cutting plastic for the conveyor houses.

Janes Grain elevator [4)

Cutting plastic for the buildings

Janes Grain elevator [3)

I have a shop jig that fits my bandsaw. It makes cutting circles very easy. I only need to cut a square a little bigger than the circle I need. I fit the square on the jig and (not shown) I slide the jig into the saw blade to begin the cut. This way I do not need to cut squares to precise size. The hardboard in the center slides back and forth also so I can set any radius I desire. Came in quite handy for 48 circles.......... I used these on top of the silos.

Janes Grain elevator [2)

A whole bunch of windows / doors!

Note - all the dust collectors I used are actually HO scale Walthers parts - the big 'dust collector' is actually their surge bin. They have a new particle dust cyclone that I use also.

All 'metal' was painted with Rust-o-ileum dull nickel. The buildings and silos were painted to look like dirty concrete (base ~80% coverage flat black, ~80% flat red oxide, ~90% flat dark gray followed by dusting with flat white.

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Images (5)
  • Janes Grain elevator 002
  • Janes Grain elevator (1)
  • Janes Grain elevator (4)
  • Janes Grain elevator (3)
  • Janes Grain elevator (2)

Very impressive build. I've seen a couple of large grain elevators out here in Southern California and they dwarf the 55-foot grain hoppers lined up next to them. One of them was about 500 feet long and had silos about 100 feet tall based on the ACF's parked next to it. It was so big you could see it from the freeway a coupe of miles away. They've since torn both of them down.

I, too, love grain elevators, but mostly the old wooden ones, in endless variety. Crossing the plains states pre-Interstate, every small town had one as you ground through on two lane roads. But, to top this beauty, you will need to scale model that concrete one north of Wichita that made the postcards.  I don't think it is still standing, either, but it was LONG. (Wonder how long that one would be in 0 scale?  How will you ship this one?)

colorado hirailer posted:

I, too, love grain elevators, but mostly the old wooden ones, in endless variety. Crossing the plains states pre-Interstate, every small town had one as you ground through on two lane roads. But, to top this beauty, you will need to scale model that concrete one north of Wichita that made the postcards.  I don't think it is still standing, either, but it was LONG. (Wonder how long that one would be in 0 scale?  How will you ship this one?)

I usually glue the silos in groups of 8 to make shipping less expensive. There is a minimum size box for all the carriers where one crosses over from package to freight. Once you get into freight the price increase is heavy.

WRT rural elevators a member of this forum HOLLSC who commented above sent me some beautiful photos of a bunch of elevators on his layout. Perhaps he would post them here? I have one design which is shown below.

Rural Grain Elevator 001

Rural Grain Elevator 002

Rural Grain Elevator 003

Rural Grain Elevator 004

Rural Grain Elevator 005

I made a small elevator for my layout (still laying track) but because of the size of the layout I am thinking about replacing it with a rural style plus a small mill along side.

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Images (5)
  • Rural Grain Elevator 001
  • Rural Grain Elevator 002
  • Rural Grain Elevator 003
  • Rural Grain Elevator 004
  • Rural Grain Elevator 005
colorado hirailer posted:

I, too, love grain elevators, but mostly the old wooden ones, in endless variety. Crossing the plains states pre-Interstate, every small town had one as you ground through on two lane roads. But, to top this beauty, you will need to scale model that concrete one north of Wichita that made the postcards.  I don't think it is still standing, either, but it was LONG. (Wonder how long that one would be in 0 scale?  How will you ship this one?)

Some photos from Scott Hollis. I am not sure where he got these built.

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Images (8)
  • IMG_1461
  • IMG_1462
  • IMG_1463
  • IMG_1465
  • IMG_1466
  • IMG_1467
  • IMG_1468
  • IMG_1469

Joe

 

Jeb Kriigel who also has JT’s MegaSteam and is in the Orange Hall every York did thesefir me a number of years ago.  He also does all the weathering on my engines.  He is currently building me a grain facility comparable to the one you originally posted.  I can’t say how impressed I am with realistic look these have up close and yours look just as impressive and am anxious to try you out.

 

scott

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OGR Publishing, Inc., 1310 Eastside Centre Ct, Ste 6, Mountain Home, AR 72653
800-980-OGRR (6477)
www.ogaugerr.com

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