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Springfield!

THE AMHERST RAILWAY SOCIETY RAILROAD HOBBY SHOW

aka SPRINGFIELD

January 24th and 25th, 2009

bronx terminal fascia

Click here for show information

Well it took a bit of negotiating, but we managed to snag some space at the largest train show in the US,  located in West Springfield, MA.  Fast Tracks will be there as will the CNJ Bronx Terminal layout.

Map to Springfield

If you plan on attending, look for us in the main building!

-T.

About the Author:

I'm your host, Tim Warris, a product developer in Port Dover, Ontario. Since March of 2007 I have been documenting the construction of the former CNJ Bronx Terminal in HO scale. For my day job, I design track building tools for Fast Tracks, a small company I own and operate. Fast Tracks makes it fast and easy to hand lay your own trackwork. Stop by our website to learn more!

Posted by: Tim | 11-27-2008 | 11:11 AM
Posted in: Next Show | Comments (1)

Walther’s Carfloat cont’d

Upgrading Rail

The rail included with the Walther’s Carfloat kit is pretty crappy.  Its plastic and is supplied in short 6″ lengths.  I guess since technically no locomotive runs on a carfloat this isn’t an issue, although they did move the loco’s used at the Bronx on and off the property on carfloats, so much for that therory…

It was a no brainer that I would replace this with some real rail, although I won’t be powering it and I’m unlikely to operate a loco on the floats as it would mean running feeders to the floats.

Fortunately it is pretty easy to add rail.  The support plates on the deck of the float are designed to take code 70 or 83 rail.  I simply glued lengths of rail in place using Pliobond.  A bit of heat with a soldering iron to cure the adheasive and it is perminantly set.  I initally tried using epoxy, but it was too brittle when cured and the rail poped off quite easily.  With Pliobond you’d have to rip the float apart to get it off.

I am amazed that after all this time a company like Walthers can’t get the track gauging through the frog to work right.  They make turnouts for pete’s sake!  Anyway, after placing the rail in the pre-formed locations for the frog on the carfloat it ran very poorly.  The flangeways, check gauge and track gauge were way off, so I tore the rail off and removed all the alignment tabs moulded onto the deck and laid the frog properly.  After that is operates smoothly.  Geez.

To lock a (real) carfloat solid to the float bridge there are large steel pockets on the front deck of the carfloats and the float bridge.  Heavy steel bars are ratcheted in place in several locations to stabilize the float and keep it from tipping while being unloaded.  The stock Walther’s carfloat has 4 of these of plastic, but the actual floats all had 6.  I replaced the plastic versions with smaller, more scale metal castings from Sea Port Model Works

I wasn’t going to modify this float much beyond the stock kit, figured I’d save the scratchbuilt float project for later.  Since the float bridge will also have the metal pockets I need them to line up with the floats, so I decided to make this change to the Walther’s float.

It actually took longer to add the rail to the float than it did to build everything else!  Worth it though.

The track bumpers in the kit also include plastic rail that just doesn’t look right up against the metal rail, so I am forming these from bits of code 70.

All the bitts and pieces from the kit look good enough, so I will use the stock versions, even though the Sea Port Model Works carfloat detail kit included some metal versions.  I’m gluing on some bitts here.  Hey, I just got that…

Having the original builders drawings for a carfloat is coming in handy!  The Walther’s kit is a pretty close match to these drawings, although I don’t have any of the detail sheets, only a couple of full size views.

On to Next Section

-T.

About the Author:

I'm your host, Tim Warris, a product developer in Port Dover, Ontario. Since March of 2007 I have been documenting the construction of the former CNJ Bronx Terminal in HO scale. For my day job, I design track building tools for Fast Tracks, a small company I own and operate. Fast Tracks makes it fast and easy to hand lay your own trackwork. Stop by our website to learn more!

Posted by: Tim | 11-27-2008 | 10:11 AM
Posted in: Latest Posts | Comments (9)

WKRP Classic Turkey Drop

they’re hitting the ground like sacks of wet cement”

A non-train post, but I couldn’t resist….

Enjoy.

BTW, this was almost 30 years ago!

Update-

“The classic “Turkeys Away” episode of WKRP in Cincinnati was based on a very unsettling real event. WKRP creator Hugh Wilson had a friend who worked for an Atlanta radio station that decided to toss live turkeys out of a helicopter for a Thanksgiving promotion. Just like the TV episode revealed, none of the folks involved with the stunt knew that domestic turkeys couldn’t fly, and a local shopping center was bombarded with turkeys hitting the ground “like bags of wet cement.” (“As God is my witness, I thought turkeys could fly!”)”

-T.

About the Author:

I'm your host, Tim Warris, a product developer in Port Dover, Ontario. Since March of 2007 I have been documenting the construction of the former CNJ Bronx Terminal in HO scale. For my day job, I design track building tools for Fast Tracks, a small company I own and operate. Fast Tracks makes it fast and easy to hand lay your own trackwork. Stop by our website to learn more!

Posted by: Tim | 11-26-2008 | 07:11 PM
Posted in: Picture of the Day | Comments (0)

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