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I'm sure a lot of us have found a banged up well loved locomotive or railroad car in one of those famous junk bins or on a table among other pieces. Let's see what you have found and have restored, kitbashed or just turned into something all your own and have given a second life. It can be anything.

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oscar

           Finally!

Thank you for posting a topic I can post much of my layout and collection into.

Now I just need a new camera  

 

 This is a one year only 633. very little grill was left. No mounting hole.

 A bit of screen, tin, brass, and solder to hold the frame together. Brass backing performs the holding. Mounted the original screw & tab thru the brass backer. 

I never painted the mesh & frame. Gave it a front coupler, since they came without one, and some frosted windows with a bud car's engineer silhouette.

 

 

bashfrontof633_zpsd5d048bd

 

engine633nw2santafe_zps8c8c8504

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Originally Posted by Adriatic:

 

 

oscar

           Finally!

Thank you for posting a topic I can post much of my layout and collection into.

Now I just need a new camera  

 

 This is a one year only 633. very little grill was left. No mounting hole.

 A bit of screen, tin, brass, and solder to hold the frame together. Brass backing performs the holding. Mounted the original screw & tab thru the brass backer. 

I never painted the mesh & frame. Gave it a front coupler, since they came without one, and some frosted windows with a bud car's engineer silhouette.

 

 

Nice job

I love these things you guys are showing.  Keep 'em coming.  

 

BTW, thank you Khayden and Terry for your compliments, and all of you for all your "likes"!

 

Rogerpete, you are right about the money.  These junkers cost very little, sometimes even free.  The biggest expense is paint, and even if three colors are needed, that's only $24 for the DupliColor that I like to use.  Cheap fun.

 

Here are a Seaboard observation and a whimsical Marx 4-wheel 6-inch tin N&W set made from the ubiquitous 556 caboose, also shown.  The tender is just a stock one repainted for N&W so that any of the Marx 4-wheel steamers could pull the consist.

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IMG_3802

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Originally Posted by TrainsRMe:

I love these things you guys are showing.  Keep 'em coming.  

 

BTW, thank you Khayden and Terry for your compliments, and all of you for all your "likes"!

 

Rogerpete, you are right about the money.  These junkers cost very little, sometimes even free.  The biggest expense is paint, and even if three colors are needed, that's only $24 for the DupliColor that I like to use.  Cheap fun.

 

Here are a Seaboard observation and a whimsical Marx 4-wheel 6-inch tin N&W set made from the ubiquitous 556 caboose, also shown.  The tender is just a stock one repainted for N&W so that any of the Marx 4-wheel steamers could pull the consist.

 

Great job nice work always love Marx

most of these steamers found their way to me as bare shells. The tender behind my 225E is a mixture of a 1680 frame,busted 2046 shell, and some PVC. The green Prewar passenger cars were a $1 each missing roofs and most of their trucks.but the paint was still good.1664 got a 675 motor, and an unfinished 4-8-4 from two broken 1666 shells.

 

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Lets go back to the time when I got into this. I was broke. I mean, Raman Noodle Macaroni & Cheese broke. If I wanted trees, I made them. If I wanted rolling stock, I dug in the box below the table at garage sales. I know this isn't the case for others, and please understand, I respect that. It has just been the case with me, and my young family. My 11 year old has a williams engine on his ceiling bedroom layout & my 8 year old has an RMT bang on his 3x8 plywood central.   We have resurrected bridges over blue paint, lego cars, and dollar store ceramic houses. Giving second & third & fourth life to things is a way of life. Support your local scroungers!
 
 Originally Posted by TrainsRMe:

I love these things you guys are showing.  Keep 'em coming.  

 

BTW, thank you Khayden and Terry for your compliments, and all of you for all your "likes"!

 

Rogerpete, you are right about the money.  These junkers cost very little, sometimes even free.  The biggest expense is paint, and even if three colors are needed, that's only $24 for the DupliColor that I like to use.  Cheap fun.

 

Here are a Seaboard observation and a whimsical Marx 4-wheel 6-inch tin N&W set made from the ubiquitous 556 caboose, also shown.  The tender is just a stock one repainted for N&W so that any of the Marx 4-wheel steamers could pull the consist.

 

 

What do you do when you have no class lamps left to break off.

 

One option is to relocate them by drilling holes in the boiler front.

They work now too  

What's more prototypical, placement or a working item ....

Sorry, couldn't resist. Scrape the brain up, I'll wait ....

 

This one is a 2046 Hudson

I've got a 2025 K-4 with the same "feature". If/when I find the photo I'll add it

  

 

000_1193

 

That tunnel will make a detailed appearance here at some point too.

I've had it since the beginning (my birth) and have begun "saving it" with white glue paper mache, and old brown paper grocery bags (I still have not run out yet), and pulp-paper drink holders from fast food joints which are about the same weight(thickness) as the original pulp. (the good end is showing here this almost bit the dust 

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 Ok, both of these were near death when I "got" them. The Crusader(really a Marx CV too) wasn't too bad shell wise, and I'll end up posting more on it later, its still not 100% done, and on the backburner now.

 

  The Commodore Vanderbilt is another story in itself.

  My Grandmothers, it spent years buried in the ground, as a dirt floor garage "ate" it up like slow moving quicksand.

 I unknowingly walked right overtop of it for many years before revealing the box while re-leveling the floor.

  It was pretty at the cab, but the front end was toasty rust. Overall, I'd place it right up there with our "leaders" above.

  I win worst rust , but not by much. And it ran quickly, never needed anything but oil, lock-tite on the wheel splines, and had very nice paint at the rear. So I know those guys worked harder on those by far.

 (but I want to hear about another literally buried find from anyone! )

 

The first repaint on it was very nice. Too nice.

It no longer looked matched to the other surviving pieces, though they look good too. The gloss on the fresh paint was too much. I tried everything the tone it down. The tender match was just awful. Then one day an attempt to de-gloss went bad. Hurray! a fresh start!

So I repainted again, and tried a technique I thought might work.

Rustoleum!

 

  The first job was RustO' too, but this time I cured it by putting it in my freezer while wet, and removed it for an hour, twice a day. It took a week to set up well, and spent near a month in the fridge.

 The cold, and moisture condensing on it from being cold, then being to brought to warm air, added a slight cloudiness to the finish, and cut the gloss a bit.

(if you try this, it will look very very "milky" for weeks once your done. Over time(month or so) the cloudiness clears more and more, but not 100%.

 

 It matches the tender pretty much perfectly now, and the RustO' went on thick enough it looks dipped too. Nobody has ever noticed, or asked about the paint job despite the cab being painted inside too! 

 All trim but the headlight lens is original. For that lens, I ground down a flashlight lens that was also a magnifying lens. I choose it because I loved the look of the flared, mushroom shaped, tin headlights (light bulbs), but hated the way they protrude past the body/housing.

 It's "look" is similar to that of a person with very powerful eyeglasses that make their eyes look much to large. That the only way I can think of to describe it, its cool.  

 

(boy that old camera was crappy at 3mp)

 Snapshot_20141027 [2)

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Originally Posted by Adriatic:

 Ok, both of these were near death when I "got" them. The Crusader(really a Marx CV too) wasn't too bad shell wise, and I'll end up posting more on it later, its still not 100% done, and on the backburner now.

 

  The Commodore Vanderbilt is another story in itself.

  My Grandmothers, it spent years buried in the ground, as a dirt floor garage "ate" it up like slow moving quicksand.

 I unknowingly walked right overtop of it for many years before revealing the box while re-leveling the floor.

  It was pretty at the cab, but the front end was toasty rust. Overall, I'd place it right up there with our "leaders" above.

  I win worst rust , but not by much. And it ran quickly, never needed anything but oil, lock-tite on the wheel splines, and had very nice paint at the rear. So I know those guys worked harder on those by far.

 (but I want to hear about another literally buried find from anyone! )

 

The first repaint on it was very nice. Too nice.

It no longer looked matched to the other surviving pieces, though they look good too. The gloss on the fresh paint was too much. I tried everything the tone it down. The tender match was just awful. Then one day an attempt to de-gloss went bad. Hurray! a fresh start!

So I repainted again, and tried a technique I thought might work.

Rustoleum!

 

  The first job was RustO' too, but this time I cured it by putting it in my freezer while wet, and removed it for an hour, twice a day. It took a week to set up well, and spent near a month in the fridge.

 The cold, and moisture condensing on it from being cold, then being to brought to warm air, added a slight cloudiness to the finish, and cut the gloss a bit.

(if you try this, it will look very very "milky" for weeks once your done. Over time(month or so) the cloudiness clears more and more, but not 100%.

 

 It matches the tender pretty much perfectly now, and the RustO' went on thick enough it looks dipped too. Nobody has ever noticed, or asked about the paint job despite the cab being painted inside too! 

 All trim but the headlight lens is original. For that lens, I ground down a flashlight lens that was also a magnifying lens. I choose it because I loved the look of the flared, mushroom shaped, tin headlights (light bulbs), but hated the way they protrude past the body/housing.

 It's "look" is similar to that of a person with very powerful eyeglasses that make their eyes look much to large. That the only way I can think of to describe it, its cool.  

 

(boy that old camera was crappy at 3mp)

 

Great job interesting story too

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