Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Rounded door frames

My least favorite aspect of passenger car construction is building the ends. The B&S cars have rounded top doors...

From Hayes Hendrick's website, taken by Todd Hackett...
As car #3 rotted on the plains east of the Rocky Mountains. She became C&S #56 in 1906. If it wasn't for this picture, I'd make it a square top door. I'll also need to file it to be rounded for matching the corner moldings.

My first attempt at forming this is to progressively drill holes until the opening is 1/2" exactly...2' scale feet wide as B&S built the doors on their narrow gauge cars.


The layout


The holes partially drilled

I then cut the pieces in half (each one is the proper width for the ends)
I'll next have to cut the top to the roof profile.

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I sat Liam on the dining room table where I've been busy with work, and turned my computer for him to watch trains. This time it was Thomas the Tank Engine (usually it is real trains).
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Last Friday, my Eastern Car Works passenger car kit arrived. When I was a little kid, my father owned two passenger cars...a 1941 Pullman built New York Central 56 seat coach, and a stylish 1939 Pullman Sleeper-Lounge car. The Sleeper Lounge, or official a 6 Bedroom, Buffet-Parlor, served on the Commodore Vanderbilt passenger train and was equivalent to the finest passenger cars of the era. This car, the Chittenango Falls, certainly helped me develop a passion for passenger cars. The Chittenango Falls was part of the second batch of cars in the streamlining of the New York Central's premier trains.

THE premier train on both the NYC and on all other railroads was the 20th Century Limited. The train was the ultimate symbol of American luxurious travel for decades, with its life spanning 1902-1967. The train entered the streamline era in 1938 with an all-new, Henry Dreyfuss designed train. Pullman, the world's premier passenger car builder, built all of the cars and ALCO build the streamlined steam locomotives. At the same time, the Pennsy streamlined the Century's rival train, the Broadway Limited...although the PRR cut corners on theirs...and had it designed by the legendary Raymond Lowey (the father of Industrial Design...also designed the Concord jets).

I've long wanted to add matching cars to my NYC streamlined hudson, and so now is the time to start. I want to build a complete 20th Century trainset (12 cars), as well as the Chittenango Falls (which had a slightly different paint scheme) and the 2600 (which had a very different paint scheme).

Eastern Car Works makes several of the cars needed to reproduce the '38 Century...as well as a sleeper for the Commodor. I ordered one of these to examine the quality of the ECW's kits. Mine is a 4-4-2 sleeper. I also ordered a set of 1938 20th Centur Limited decals from Champ Decals. Both were dissappointments.

Here is the ECW kit...

I knew that the trucks were wrong...they are correct for a 1939 or later car, but not for a 1938 car...the '38 cars had unique looking Triple Bolster trucks...which used to be available from MDC/Roundhouse.

Here is a car side along side the official Pullman drawings...

And the problem...
The windows should be the same height as the stripe on the hudson's tender. The windows are a scale 4.5" too high on the car sides. This really matters because of the striping which runs the length of the train.

Here is a very high quality brass model of a 4-4-2 sleeper in '38 paint. It was produced by Fine Art Models and sold for $2750...1:32 scale.
The stripes must line up.

Also, my Champ decals didn't include the striping or the black outlines on the aluminum letters...so I'm going to have to find a source for the striping...or possibly paint it myself with very careful masking. In 1:87.1 scale, a .75" stripe is less than 0.010" wide.

Currently, to fix the window issue, my 4-4-2 is in the process of being hacked to pieces. I'll reassemble it into a correctly proportioned 4-4-2. I'll also build the Chittenango Falls from scratch...and then decide whether to kitbash more ECW kits or scratchbuild. Walthers is coming out with a 1948 Century for $65 per car, which includes a 4-4-2, but that is far more than I am willing to spend on the train...it is worth my time but not much money...I'm a model railroader, not a collector.

The HO NYC cars will be a back burner item.

I'm on the fence on what to do about my 2-8-0 project. I've invested $55 in the motor...and now I've heard back from Grandt Line and the gearing will run around $60-$60. The drivers cost me $50. The Soundtraxx Tsunami (digital controls and sound) will run a little over $100...and so this engine is rapidly approaching $300. Ouch. My next engine will be build with a 37:1 gearbox for $15 and a $15 motor...and maybe just a $20 chip for digital control...no sound.

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