Three more cars added. Now ten in all.
The nice part of taking close ups of your work is that you get to see all of the minute detail your eyes could not. Unfortunately, as I processed these photos I was horrified at the areas I missed (poor quality control ?), decals upside down (poor eyesight ?), over weathering, under weathering, other miscellaneous boo boos. In any case, here is the deal. I have completed five more military flat cars.
1) I tried to make the tie downs as realistic as possible given that they are not prototypical and I had to substitute jewelry clasps for the real thing. Threading chains where there are no receptacles on the vehicles means threading through tank treads, etc. It also means opening chain links for "turnbuckles" and clasps. They look big in the photos, yes? In real life they look so small I needed to order a jewelers magnifier to get anything done. On one of the cars I used eight tie downs and it took freakin forever to get everything attached. I thought a trip to the looney bin was up next.
2) I gave up on the tie downs as it was just to difficult and, a bonus, with the tie downs in place it was very difficult or impossible to remove vehicles without breaking chains. I went with blocking instead. On one of the cars the blocking is 1/4" stock and looks too big. On another of the cars the blocking is 1/8" stock and looks too small. Sigh . . . . 3/16 is next, I guess.
3) The US Army flat cars are Lionel PS-4 flats I repainted and decaled. Please imagine my reaction when I blew up these photos and saw decals upside down.
4) Some of the flat cars are Menards cars I bought for $25. A great value.
5) I tried to include as many different types of vehicles as possible. There are many more to come. I will have a train, eventually, that is about 20 flat cars long. No layout, of course, but a long train. All the vehicles are die cast. Some are as big as 1/43 and one as small as 1/56. See if you can figure out which ones?
6) The tan Abrams M1A is a SWORD model. I absolutely love the detail. The last vehicle has yet to go on a flat car. That is also a SWORD HET985 I think. An amazing level of detail. Everything opens and operates. Whew, lots of mistakes to correct and carts to do. Now, about that layout . . .
7) I added two more flat cars tonight. The car below is a Lionel PS-4 repainted desert tan and carries a SWORD HET985 hauler.
8) The second car is also a Lionel PS-4 flat army green carrying two Corgi armored personnel carrie
The City of Munoz has been notified by the Department of Defense that if this load successfully meets the strict standards of railhead facilities, many more vehicles will be coming through and, some of them, are huge. Of course, this "secret" has spread like wildfire through the city and residents expect that, along with a new loading facility, trains will be running in Munoz once again. Watch out for lots of tanks, personnel carriers, and HET transport trucks.