What have I been up too lately? Lots of things, and no I have not stopped building.
Most of my projects come up from a desire to recreate photos or advertising or some other record of a subject that intrigues me. In this case the Department of Defense train loads and War Time push for Victory during the golden era of railroads, World War Two.
During this same time period many of my favorite trains favorites based on design and style were intermingling with these amazing flat car loads of artillery, tanks, guns, crates, Jeeps, trucks, bulldozers, and many many more fun things.
I’ll take a look at what I did to make some photos of my favorite trains and war trains.. I had to build a lot of 1/48 scale Tamyia, Aurora, and Bandai kits! 2 years as a matter of fact, and a small fortune many of these kits are $20-$75 a piece. To add the monotony of building the same fine scale kit over and over and over and over.. you get the idea. In the next few posts I will share some of my working progress and what I did to get these things where I like them to be so they would photo as authentically as possible.
I’m not an expert at anything and limited to what knowledge I find in books and online, talking with folks that may have some insight Into the subject. But whenever possible I used the RPCYC, FRA standards manuals, historical societies, clubs, and other similar sources for research. In this case I had a lot available to me for the artillery as military scale modeling is a huge community far reaching and way larger than model railroading. However it’s good to note these military modelers don’t have a whole lot on trains and loadings, it was an unexpected roadblock not finding as much as I originally thought I would on military movements on rail in World War Two.
Like it or not thanks for looking I hope I didn’t waste your time. So far I’ve reached a train that is currently too long and too heavy at nearly 40 cars of heavy artillery and transport vehicles by order of the Department of Defense approximate date winter 1943. Whey that date? I like the cast Sherman tanks and I also was limited too what I had available for kits so I chose carefully with some of the very earliest welded tanks and most of them cast, Long Tom guns are also 1942-1943 variations.