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I'm really pleased with that! I certainly had some luck with getting it to this stage though. Remember the abortive, botched orange paint job that I had to strip posted about a few days ago? Maybe all my locos should be numbered Lucky 7!
Recording my progress, or usually the lack of it, in building kits, creating model railways and other related and sometimes unrelated matters!
Every so often I get to the point when its time for a tidy up! I am not the World's most tidy modeller but I like to think all great artists produced masterpieces in the chaos of their studios and I might follow the same philosophy!
The 3D printed diesel loco did not come with couplers so that was something I had to address. I needed to emulate something like thee coupling on the black loco in the picture below so out came some scrap plastic card and following some slicing and dicing suitable shaped couplers were crafted. These would be mounted on some plastic rod.
I was rostered as shunter for yesterday's quarry day event at the Rocks By Rail Museum. Since I did my YouTube video on shunting (available here ) I have had some comments from people involved with shunting in some form either directly or indirectly which has been really interesting and thanks to those who have commented. The more I find out about shunting the more admiration I have for those who did it as a full time job.
A sunny start to the day always makes things look good!
Time to find a driver figure for the 3D printed diesel loco. My first choice was a figure I had already painted some time ago and looked right. However mounting him in the cab showed that the roof would have to be left off if he was going to stay! Not ideal!
Using that against the loco cab, I could drill holes in the right place! A bit of superglue and some choice words as a result of them being fiddly to fit saw the grab handles fitted.
The cab interior built yesterday also got a spray of white and the details just need picking out. The grill also got painted red just to add some variation to the Lemon Yellow!
I do like the way the grab handles have come out.
More to do yet but coming along. If I can grab a moment or two in the next few days I might see it finished!
Now Mrs. Woody would like to fill the empty space of my head with more tasks from her list of jobs for me but I think my head is better left an empty space! However, back to the now Lemon Yellow 3D printed loco and it has a largish cab with big windows so I decided that it really needed some form of cab interior to fill that empty space. Nothing too detailed, just the basics of a floor and an operating consul with perhaps a few dials and levers. Out came some plastic card and after a few measurements a floor was created along with the parts for a consul.
Once the consul was glued together.....
...some thin slices of plastic rod were cut and glued to form instrument dials and some lengths of rod were glued into drilled holes to form the brake throttle and direction levers.
An unusual start to my day at the Rocks by Rail Museum yesterday in as much as you don't see too many bikes on the tracks! This was a bit different. A local specialist bike maker has been to the Museum before to take publicity shots and they had another new bike so they were back. Being a keen long standing cyclist myself the two guys got fully questioned by me! Apparently the frame is 3D printed Titanium. Now I have never heard of 3D printing metal before but there it was in front of me and very nice it looked to! Certainly different from the 3D printed models that I am used to dealing with.
Have I got £10,000 spare Mrs. Woody? There is a rather nice bike I like!
Back to reality and the Museum is getting ready for the Spring Bank Holiday events this weekend with the start of Sundews Great Walk 50th anniversary. A great display as well as models to bring alive the story.