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Thanks passenger train collector. I just stared one it is all most done it has ben worked on for over a week. I just needed a roof idea so I googled it and found a very good looking one and based mines of that as a base and add to it like a ruff salte. I will post pictures when it done thin after it is on the layout. Thinks anyway, I will keep them in minde on the way . paul/Matt 

I know alan that is how I got the idea is on Dave's layout here on the forum. I am making a steel mill like like his,and I am making a sheet metal mill like the one in his shop. Thanks!!!

 

And the other Alan I cant wait to see the pitchers of yours too!!! Thanks 

 

thank you to all that have helped me with this topic! 

OK, here are mine.  They are all 3-D backdrops, albeit deep ones.  They are in place to disguise a long descending track that connects to a storage yard underneath the other side of the layout.

 

First, my take on the Weirton Steel Open Hearth mill.  I've used 2 Lionel Industrial Smokestacks to simulate individual furnaces.  The prototype had 17.  The building is positioned 45 degrees to the wall to give some depth to the backdrop.

 

 

SAM_0390W

 

Next, the prototype Weirton Steel Blooming Mill.

 

 

300_Mill Tour 1957

 

And this is my take on that building.

 

 

BLM2 005

 

I don't have a close-up with the building detailed.  It now sports a lighted billboard.

 

I also have plans (and a partially constructed frame) for Weirton Steel's Strip Steel Mill.

 

Alan Graziano and Dave Minarik are two of the excellent steel mill modelers on this forum.  There are a few others as well (Cleveland Rock Stars - not sure I got the handle right).  These guys are producing great looking detailed structures.  Mine are more like backdrops.

 

George

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Images (3)
  • SAM_0390W
  • 300_Mill Tour 1957
  • BLM2 005
Last edited by G3750
Originally Posted by Trainman2001:

Does that mean we actually still make bearings in the good ole' US of A... Hooray!

Steel-making is alive in the USA, but in the form of specialized metal product mills or mini-mills.  The days of the large integrated steel mill complexes like Weirton are over.  Also, since steel is the most recycled material in the world, the years have seen decreasing use of blast furnaces to get iron ore in preparation for making steel.  Now you see a lot of iron and scrap electric furnaces to remelt steel.

 

George

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