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I was wondering the same thing.  Bob Stevenson can do it, as can most dental labs and jewelry makers.  I am trying to find a sand cast foundry that can do three or four pieces at a time - had one that did it for reasonable $ but cannot make contact any more.

Starting to forget what I have posted on this thread - you may have seen all my bare brass.  Well, maybe you need to see my giant brass Vanderbilt tender?

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.032 brass, riveted with brass escutcheon pins.  Rivet gun was Boeing surplus - we figured it had driven a million rivets into B-17s in its lifetime.  It blew a gasket last year while riveting an aileron for a Cub. 1.6" scale, 7 /2" gauge.  700# locomotive only.

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@Bruk posted:

I recently acquired this Westside Models Virginian Triplex at an estate. Needed a lot of repair.

It was missing one of the ladders on the tender....so I redesigned and had it 3d printed and cast in brass. I couldn’t find anything aftermarket that would work.

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Awesome! Impressed! :-) That's a cool technique!

Kind regards

Sarah

Your pulpwood cars are very nice, I also have two of those cars in brass but really no idea of the manufacturer...

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And I just got for a very low price a hopper, no manufacture marking on it except Japan on a truck; maybe an old Max Gray. I do not know what type of hopper it is and from what time period.  It has been sold with a gold paint to preserve brass certainly, not  a really good idea, I will repaint it in a prototypical color.

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And another car in needs of completing and paint, as the previous one no idea of manufacturer....

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Daniel

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And another car in needs of completing and paint, as the previous one no idea of manufacturer....

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Daniel

The box says it all.  International Model Products imported brass from Japan starting in the early 1950's.  The imported HO and O scale products.  Budget brass for their time, but I have several of their offerings.  Some of it was 17/64" scale and some was 1/4" scale.

A "Before and After" in brass:

A Balboa import of the1970's this is an Illinois Central Forney, used in Chicago suburban service. They were built by the Rogers Locomotive Works of Paterson NJ in the late 1880's.  IC engineer John Luther Jones ("Casey Jones") ran one for the 1892 Columbian Exposition.  He disliked operating this type of locomotive "being trapped in a closet all day."

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With some surgery and detail work, the IC engine is becoming a model of an 1895 Baldwin built Forney for the Staten Island Rapid Transit.  It was during a period of B&O bankruptcy and Pennsylvania RR control (1893-1905) that brought three of them to the Island.  SIRT was a dyed-in-the-wool exclusively Cooke/Alco buyer. But in this case, PRR arranged the purchase.  Numbered 16-18, they were all sold and went south to lumber mill owners in Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana by 1906.  SIRT by then was converting all its Cooke built Forney engines with Wootten patent fireboxes to burn low smoke anthracite and get new steel cabs. New anti-smoke laws were taking effect in the NY area by then. So, for best shop efficiency with a uniform locomotive roster, the three odd Baldwins were sold.

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Forneys did not need to be turned around at the end of a run as they ran well in either direction.  The black cord you see is for the emergency brake. The emergency cord running through all the coaches attached to it. The trains were equipped with Eames vacuum brakes. Pulling the cord opened a reset-able emergency valve in the locomotive that unsealed the vacuum which held the train's brakes in an 'off' position. This let air into the brake system which then stopped the train.

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The 1895 SIRT Baldwin Forney painted and lettered. Aluminum trim and paint were more costly than gold in 1895 and aluminum trimming was thought to be a mark of quality. (A lot like chrome trim on cars of the 1950's, when more chrome trim told the world you bought a more expensive car).

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Prototype SIRT 18 at Arlington in 1900.  The train has a "smoker"/ combine for mail bags, express packages and newspaper bundles. Men over 18 only could ride in it, smoking pipes, cigars, ciggies or chewing tobacco.  The middle car was for young people who could travel alone without chaperones and mothers or families with children. The last car was for women only and young girls traveling with a chaperone.  Such were the public sensitivities of those "gay 'nineties" we read about.

arltrain1900



S. Islander

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Thanks, yes I weathered it. Experimented with some Vallejo Model Air acrylic which I’m not quite the biggest fan of yet.

LHS carries the Vallejo line. I don't use it for weathering, just standard painting, but I'm not a huge fan. Coverage is so so with a airbrush.

Personally I prefer automotive paint. It's one and done for base coats. Just have really good ventilation or the fumes will kill you....

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