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I have been slowly building a Korber Models #304 roundhouse. It's a nice model that is going to look great sitting next to my Millhouse River Studio turntable. 

Gluing the beams

 

Weathering the beams

  • a single coat of light brown stain (golden oak)

 

Weathering the walls

  • smeared artist gesso over the walls
  • removed excess with a paper towel
    • the end result is gesso filling in the mortal lines
    • there's also a little bit of gesso on the "bricks", which I think looks pretty good
  • lightly sprayed the walls with Rustoleum flat brown spray paint

 

Building the base

  • I am building a custom base (per the optional instructions provided with the kit)
  • not much progress on this yet
  • My local Lowes was kind enough to cut a 4x8 sheet of 1/4 plywood into roughly three 32x32 squares
    • just big enough for a three stall roundhouse (and to fit my layout)

 

Gluing the walls

  • I used Gorilla glue (the one with the blue cap)
    • dries pretty fast and seems to attach to the resin castings well
  • I used some small clamps to hold the pieces together until the glue dried

 

Building the roof

  • The kit comes with black plastic panels
  • I plan to build a custom roof because I am not a fan of the black plastic pieces 

 

Overall, the kit is really nice. It currently sells for about $250 (three stalls). Additional stalls are about $50. The provided templates don't seem to be to scale, but I don't think it really matters. For example, the wood beam template outlines are slightly bigger than the physical wood beams. The total length of the wood beams are exactly 29 inches (which I believe is correct). The template is slightly larger (about a quarter inch or so). It could be a printing issue, or it could be that the templates are simply "try to get it as close as possible". I did a lot of dry fitting before gluing. 

I am also adding a few additional beams to increase the strength of the roundhouse. The kit instructions mention this detail. I picked up some 3/8 inch beams at Michael's for a few dollars. 

Brian

 

 

 

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Sorry, I read the original post a bit too fast, I thought you were asking about wall mount.  The link below are for former Keil Line shades.  They are white metal castings, a bit larger, deeper and more robust than the plastruct ones.  They actually accept 12 v incandescent bulbs fairly well (meaning not too much of the bulb sticks out beyond the edge of the shade.  I typically use these for outdoor light poles or yard flood lights with 1/8" brass tubing.  I prefer the soft metal because the mounting side of the shade can be easily drilled out to accept the brass tube.  

http://www.scalecitydesigns.co...-KEIL-LINE_p_54.html

Dave

Thanks Dave. Those may work well. 

I'd like to use the Plastruct LF-6 lamp shades. Mostly because Korber recommended them, and LOS (https://ogrforum.ogaugerr.com/t...ng-in-the-roundhouse) used them. The results look pretty good. However, I can't find a dealer who sells them. I know I can purchase them directly from Plastruct. However, Plastruct website does not accept PayPal.

Are there any forum sponsors selling Plastruct LF-6 lamp shades?

Here's a custom base built from 1/4 MDF. The rail slots are cut using a router. The rail slot lines were measured/ re-measured about a thousand times. :-) The track entering the roundhouse must be slightly bent to match up with the 24" inch Millhouse River Studio turntable. I still need to paint the base, secure the base to the table, and secure the roundhouse to the base.

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