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Author Topic: progress on my boiler house kit  (Read 2182 times)
steamloco
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« on: March 23, 2007, 10:03:01 PM »

I've purchased and nearly completed a SierraWest boiler house kit and have come to a point where I'm not sure which direction I would like to proceed.  I am debating whether or not to put a removable roof on the model or continue to build it as the kit directions instruct.  I'd like to built a removable roof but am not sure quite how to go about it.  Any suggestions?


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marc_reusser
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« Reply #1 on: March 24, 2007, 04:45:29 AM »

From the photos, it looks very nicely done....What scale is this? "O"?

I personally am not a big fan of removable roofs...I like looking into a structure from the scale human p.o.v. Most all the lift-off roof work I have seen was somewhat ill fitting, or didn't age well over time (ie warped, or broke in some way".  But then that's just my own wierd opinion....I'm a guy that likes "basics" ...and not all kinds of "gimmicky" things on models. (gimmicky not meant in derogatory manner towards your idea.)

If you do go with a removeable roof, your biggest challenge will be to work around the stack, and keep it fittig/sitting correctly all around, over the long haul.

I guess you could always make only a portion/section of the roof removeable, and make it so that it blends on with the fixed section....this way the stack could remain/be located in the fixed section. and you would avoid the problem of how to remove the roof around it.

Somewhat of example of what I am suggesting was done by Chuck Doan on his Locomotive Repair shed Dio.





Marc
« Last Edit: March 24, 2007, 03:30:27 PM by marc_reusser » Logged

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TRAINS1941
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« Reply #2 on: March 24, 2007, 12:55:49 PM »

I think I would go with Marc on this.  Looking at this from a human scale p.o.v..  I went back to SierraWest Web site and looking at the finished model with the roof on, makes it feel that your there looking inside.  Your doing a very nice job on that model.

Jerry
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