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I scratch built a 2.5' tall, 40" long trestle using 1/4" square dowels.  The vertical supports have 5 post with a varying amount of sills (largest bent has 3 and smallest has 1) and a pair of sway braces attached to the vertical supports in between each of the sills. Each bent is connected by 6 horizontal supports (per level) and 2 diagonal supports on each side of the structure (again, per level).  Will the trestle support a Lionel AT&SF 4-8-4 Northern?  If it matters, I constructed it out of basswood and secured the wood together using wood glue and 23 gauge 3/4" Brad nails.

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You should have no problems at all.  My trestle used 1/4" square poplar for the bent posts, with smaller bracing pieces.  It was all glued together using Elmer's Carpenters Wood Glue.  No nails or screws were used.  It will support my body weight.

trestle09

Plastic clothespin-like clamps were used to hold braces while the glue dried.

trestle14

trestle19

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Last edited by Bob

There are curved wooden stringers under the outside rails of the track.  After the trestle was complete, I drilled about every 4th tie slightly smaller than a #18 nail (drilled into the stringer as well) and then nailed the track.  The nails were pushed in using needle nose pliers since they are only slightly larger than the holes.

The entire story of building the trestle, with many photos, is on my website (link below my signature).  In the menu on the left of the main page, click on "Photos" then "Building Summit Trestle."

@Bob posted:

You should have no problems at all.  My trestle used 1/4" square poplar for the bent posts, with smaller bracing pieces.  It was all glued together using Elmer's Carpenters Wood Glue.  No nails or screws were used.  It will support my body weight.

trestle09

Plastic clothespin-like clamps were used to hold braces while the glue dried.

trestle14

trestle19

Wow Bob!  That is impressive. 

George

@VJandP posted:

Love this trestle. It looks a lot like the Kinzua Bridge tthat I hope to re-create one day. Hopefully it’ll still be available when I’m ready for it. 🤨

I've learned that in O-scale, with so many small and cottage businesses, you'd better buy something when you see it (even if you won't use it for a while).  For example, the kits to build these two bridges (5-foot on the left, 6-foot on the right) are from Miami Valley Products.  I bought the kits when I designed the layout.  They were finally built and installed (replacing temporary lift-out boards) about 10 years later.  Miami Valley Products had been gone for about 5 years by that time.

RS-1s on bridge

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Last edited by Bob
@Bob posted:

I've leaned that in O-scale, with so many small and cottage businesses, you'd better buy something when you see it (even if you won't use it for a while).  For example, the kits to build these two bridges (5-foot on the left, 6-foot on the right) are from Miami Valley Products.  I bought the kits when I designed the layout.  They were finally built and installed (replacing temporary lift-out boards) about 10 years later.  Miami Valley Products had been gone for about 5 years by that time.





You’re not wrong. This has been the case before. I would be OK ordering it and holding it for a while… Just need to figure out what the permanent layout looks like so I can lock in in the design.


BTW, Your labout looks awesome!

@SteveG posted:

Darrell,

yes, I saw late last night that Ross has them.

i am asking how to make them about 13” high.

I'm not sure, but this is lifted off the Ross website:

Each Tier is 3" Tall. Start with Tier 1 and build in 3" increments to get up to 18" tall. Bridge piers fit all Tiers. Two styles, all same leg length and sloped. Sloped is for your bottom section only. (That sits on the ground)

Sounds like you should be able to get 12" easy, one more tier would get you 15". So you would just stack tier 1 thru 4 to get to 12" plus the footing.

This does get spendy though, these are not cheap by any means.

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