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Thought you all would enjoy some pictures of what was just about the perfect light coming through the clerestory windows in the layout room this morning....  The light was illuminating the power station area so I took advantage of snapping a few shots.  As the sun changes position throughout the year, I am fortunate to get some natural light on many parts of the layout....I hope you all enjoy these pictures.  As always, if you right click and then click on "open link in new window", you will get a full page view of the scene....

 

Thanks for looking!

Alan

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Original Post

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Railroaded....not that I want to get into a detailed discussion about your question but I don't worry too much about the fading.  I am not going to live long enough to notice the difference...LOL!!  Seriously though...I have special blinds that cover the windows along with the low UV glass.  I have not noticed any fading with those precautions.

 

I use 6500K fluorescent lighting with no problems with fading at this point...but...the lights are not on most of the time since I have natural light to work with AND I have tall ceilings so the lights are over 6 feet above the highest levels of the layout....this reduces the effect of the UV light.

 

Alan

Originally Posted by Ingeniero No1:

Alan, you slave driver, you . . . so early in the morning and you had those poor little guys in the coal pit working so hard just so you could take their picture!

 

And I still get a kick out of those great looking power transformers with the insulators . . . and how you made them!

 

Great pictures for sure!

 

Alex

At Mount Storm Power Station those guys started work earlier than I did at 6 am.  When I rolled into the lot, there was always a backup of 20 or so coal trucks waiting to dump, and a string of hopper cars waiting for the rotating coal unloader.

 

When they laid us in Engineering and instrumentation off, the VP told us a power company has two main expenditures, fuel and salaries.  Since we can't get rid of the coal pile, we will have to get rid of you.  The honest truth!!  20 years later I laugh about it.  I'm not worth a lump of coal!  

Originally Posted by leavingtracks:

David.....Thanks...your comment means a lot since you are a photographer!!

 

Mark...great story although at the time you guys lost your jobs, I'll bet it wasn't humorous...

 

Alan

Alan,

After year of it hanging over our heads, it was kind of a relief.  However, once we got talking about his comments some guys got mad, a lot who got mad were ones who didn't lose their jobs.

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