Skip to main content

this was a fun little project.  B een a long time since I made a boat.

 

When I finished my Andrea Doria Boatyard (bashed Menard's Moe's garages) I placed some boats next to it.  Notice the "cruiser" in the photo below, it's a cardstock model made about three years ago, very light and small so that the magnets in my moving-boat-on-lake-mechanism can move it smoothly around the lake.  It just didn't look  good there - its small and a boatyard deserves a nice big cruiser up at its dock.  

 

Slide1

 

 

So I made a new, scale 36-foot cruiser as shown below, modeled after the rather boxy cabin cruisers of the 1940s and very early 1950s . . . I named it "MY PI" - not sure why, but my story is that a math Professor is buying it for his retirement, and its "his piece of the pie. " And of course, Pi is an irrational number, and nothing is as irrational as buying a boat.  Anyway, it looks a lot better in front of the dockyard.  

Slide2

 

Anyway, it's scratch-built of wood and such and I took seats and all from the interiors of a couple of several very inexpensive diecast convertibles to make the interior, etc.  My vignette on board has the Andre-Doria boatyard salesman (yellow jacket) showing Mr. and Mrs. Math Professor their new boat, and telling they that they can count on this being the safest boat on the lake: "An Andrea Doria just won't sink." (The timeline of my layout is late 1955. ).

Slide3

Slide4

Attachments

Images (4)
  • Slide1
  • Slide2
  • Slide3
  • Slide4
Original Post

Replies sorted oldest to newest

Looks nice! I think the big cruiser does look better in there than the smaller boat, with ready made story to go along with it. Which came first the story or the boat? Or do you come up with all the great stories while making the projects? Just curious.

 

clem k, good idea about the SS Minnow. You could make an even larger one for Thursten Howell III and Lovey.

Originally Posted by Andrew B.:

I like it, but now that other boat is looking mighty small lol

And well it should, since it is really an Athearn model originally made for HO. Both Athearn and Rivarossi produced items for Lionel when they tried out the HO market in the fifties. I'm not sure how or when Lionel migrated it to the O gauge line, but it's really too small to be a believable cabin cruiser in that scale...

 

Lee's model, on the other hand, looks great!

 

Bill in FtL

Add Reply

Post

OGR Publishing, Inc., 1310 Eastside Centre Ct, Suite 6, Mountain Home, AR 72653
800-980-OGRR (6477)
www.ogaugerr.com

×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×
×