Skip to main content

I am starting construction on a steel mill for one of my customers. The base board is 24 inches by 30 inches. The mill will incorporate some of the details of a mill located in Weirton, West Virginia.

Here is the basic sketch and a couple of pictures of early construction of the stoves.20231129_16353620231129_16354920231129_163605

Attachments

Images (3)
  • 20231129_163536
  • 20231129_163549
  • 20231129_163605
Original Post

Replies sorted oldest to newest

George,

I was provided a picture of one of the rolling mills. I plan to try to match some of the details of the building on the blast furnace building.

In my real job, we worked on the storage tanks next to the river that were owned by Weirton after that section of the mill was closed. The storage tank portion was sold off to one of our customers.

David,

Were you on the Weirton side of the river ?

George,

I was provided a picture of one of the rolling mills. I plan to try to match some of the details of the building on the blast furnace building.

In my real job, we worked on the storage tanks next to the river that were owned by Weirton after that section of the mill was closed. The storage tank portion was sold off to one of our customers.

David,

Were you on the Weirton side of the river ?

Hi Alan,

Are you referring to the Strip Steel building?  That structure is on my list for the layout.  It will sit to the right of the Open Hearth (as you face the mills).  That is a brick faced structure which still stands (actually is still in use, I think).  Here are a few of the photos I took back in 2010.  The building was originally a cream / tan / yellow brick color.

There is a lot of cool piping detail along its face.  I plan to open up one of these bays for a spur into the building.

2010 Thanksgiving 2892010 Thanksgiving 296E2010 Thanksgiving 299E

The roof detail is also very interesting.  Let me know if you need some photos (e-mail).  I've taken a bunch.

George

Attachments

Images (3)
  • 2010 Thanksgiving 289
  • 2010 Thanksgiving 296E
  • 2010 Thanksgiving 299E

George,

I was provided a picture of one of the rolling mills. I plan to try to match some of the details of the building on the blast furnace building.

In my real job, we worked on the storage tanks next to the river that were owned by Weirton after that section of the mill was closed. The storage tank portion was sold off to one of our customers.

David,

Were you on the Weirton side of the river ?

Nope, across the river in Ohio but with family and friends in WV, was frequently there.

Dave

David,

I wrote that part under the board already. I hope it makes the model ten times more valuable.

Billy,

I use a template made of .015” styrene that is cut as a stringer that allows me to draw the stair on the round surface. I glue the treads on the pipe and then add angle posts and a flat strip as the handrail. The diameter is so small that there will be large gaps between the stairs. It does not look as good as on a bigger diameter but it still provides a great detail.

Alan, It looks so big and so amazing! Especially with a car there for scale.

That begs the next question: I know Allis Chalmers was a very diverse manufacturer, but what is on that car?? Almost looks like a scrubber of some sort.

Do you plan to make it smoke? I used a smoke generator in my boiler house, sold for a remote controlled tank cheap $$$ on A**zon

Attachments

Images (1)
  • Screen Shot 2023-12-10 at 5.34.51 PM
Videos (1)
IMG_2794

No smoke for this mill Mr. Tracks. I will leave that to my customer. I think the car is carrying a generator. I am not sure.

Jim,

This car is from my first set purchased some time in 1962 I think. It had a Lionel Lines steam engine with coal car, a maintenance car, a cities service green tank car, the Allis Chamers car and a brown Lionel lines caboose. I remember it was in a yellow box and it was purchased in Union New Jersey at a store that was pretty close to the factory in Irvington.

Hey Alan, looks great. You do such awesome work. I've followed your stuff in the past. Alan, I spent my entire career at Weirton Steel working in about every dept. In case you have any questions about the mill give me a yell.  I'll be glad to help.  George has some great pictures and there is a lot of pics of the entire mill at the weirton historical society.  They have most copies of the weirton steel bulletin which features different parts of the plant.   FYI - the green building color that you see in George's pictures is "National" Steel Green.  This is the color that National steel adopted for it's plants. Prior to that the Weirton Steel Green paint color was a darker green  (leaning towards a forest green). The majority of the buildings that had sheet metal sides and roofs were jet black -  to hide the graphite and the red open hearth dust.

Tom

Alan, It looks so big and so amazing! Especially with a car there for scale.

That begs the next question: I know Allis Chalmers was a very diverse manufacturer, but what is on that car?? Almost looks like a scrubber of some sort.

Do you plan to make it smoke? I used a smoke generator in my boiler house, sold for a remote controlled tank cheap $$$ on A**zon

It's a condenser.

No smoke for this mill Mr. Tracks. I will leave that to my customer. I think the car is carrying a generator. I am not sure.

Jim,

This car is from my first set purchased some time in 1962 I think. It had a Lionel Lines steam engine with coal car, a maintenance car, a cities service green tank car, the Allis Chamers car and a brown Lionel lines caboose. I remember it was in a yellow box and it was purchased in Union New Jersey at a store that was pretty close to the factory in Irvington.

Alan, Like you and Dave that was the childhood set in our house.IMG_0807I'm the little one.  Christmas 1962.

Attachments

Images (1)
  • IMG_0807
Last edited by coach joe

Alan, Kinda nifty that you chose that particular car to set in the photo. It defiantly became it's own curiosity! Was that intentional, or just a random pick of the litter?

CoachJoe, thanks for pointing out the proper terminology! And also pretty cool that you had your childhood photo to post with that A-C car in it!!

jwtex, Your link was very enlightening! I grew up in the 70s plowing snow and chopping corn on an Allis-Chalmers WD-45, which was an amazing tractor. In 1987, I was installing big Allis-Chalmers pumps in a creosote recovery plant built on the 100 acre site of polluted former railroad tie plant. May have been some of the last pumps they made...

Add Reply

Post

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

×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×
×