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General Category => Modellers At Work => Topic started by: finescalerr on September 01, 2023, 03:50:28 PM

Title: The HO Scale Project From Hell
Post by: finescalerr on September 01, 2023, 03:50:28 PM
As some vaguely may recall, last December (2022) I began work on an HO scale model of the Southern Pacific depot at Goleta, California. I had taken photos back in 1991 and finally started drawing plans in 2-D CAD a mere 32 years later. My photos lacked some minor details so I had to do a lot of research and download more photos from the Internet. The drawing took a couple of months to complete and required many minor revisions after I began building. Construction began in February of this year. I finished the model last Wednesday, August 30, 2023 at about 1:30 p.m.

Since 1991 most of my modeling has been in 1:48 scale so why HO? First, it's a big structure in HO, about 20 inches end to end, and we have little space to store or display models. Second, I have a lot of HO scale SP locos and rolling stock but none in a larger scale. Finally, a former contributor, Ed Morris, wanted me to design an HO kit for each of us, an idea he soon regretted after realizing how clumsy I am at kit design and hearing about the aggravating problems I encountered over the next half year as I fumbled along.
Title: Re: The HO Scale Project From Hell
Post by: finescalerr on September 01, 2023, 04:05:51 PM
If you count test builds, I must have designed, redesigned, built, and rebuilt the depot at least five times. The second to the last time I had erected the walls and was test fitting a laser cut roof panel when a piece of charcoal fell onto the rear of the freight section and indelibly stained it. In disgust I built the whole damned thing again.

But that was after my laser broke for the second time, conveniently a couple of weeks after the warranty expired. (Why do you think that piece of charcoal occurred?) I spent all of April arguing with the less than honest and more than greedy American distributor, finally told him to jump in a lake, and appealed directly to the manufacturer in Australia. The owner has integrity, sent replacement parts, and assigned his tech rep to instruct me via e-mail in testing and replacing parts. That took another three weeks. Construction resumed late in May.

The result is the wood and cardstock structure you see in the photos. It is 100% scratchbuilt from the photos to the plans to the doors, walls, trim, windows, shingles, chimney, and ladder leaning against the rear freight house wall.
Title: Re: The HO Scale Project From Hell
Post by: Lawrence@NZFinescale on September 01, 2023, 04:13:38 PM
it'll be OK once you add a bit of grime :-)
Title: Re: The HO Scale Project From Hell
Post by: finescalerr on September 01, 2023, 04:15:21 PM
So there it is, as accurate a model of the Goleta depot as you are likely to find and a model that makes me seriously question my sanity. Especially since I live in a region, thanks to climate change, now notorious for the likelihood of a massive brush fire. That means the original 1:1 scale Goleta depot, from 1904, well may outlast my miniature version.

Any questions? Just ask.

Russ
Title: Re: The HO Scale Project From Hell
Post by: finescalerr on September 01, 2023, 04:17:39 PM
Lawrence, please feel free to stand in the corner. Illustrated instructions attached. -- Russ
Title: Re: The HO Scale Project From Hell
Post by: Lawrence@NZFinescale on September 01, 2023, 05:36:21 PM
I'm working on a building myself just now.

The building itself has been relatively painless, but the addition of grime has been a bit more exhausting.
Title: Re: The HO Scale Project From Hell
Post by: finescalerr on September 01, 2023, 06:54:26 PM
I built my depot "as new" because all the early photos show it in good shape. I think it's the only "as new" model I've built. Besides, weathering takes more time than building and I'm fed up with this project. So there! -- Russ
Title: Re: The HO Scale Project From Hell
Post by: Lawrence@NZFinescale on September 02, 2023, 12:25:05 AM
The old 'whether to weather' debate.

Title: Re: The HO Scale Project From Hell
Post by: Design-HSB on September 02, 2023, 02:58:53 AM
Russ, I'm totally OK with building a model in pristine condition.  Because it's about building a model as close as possible to reality and if we look around in reality, there are more accurate buildings than ramshackle decaying ones.  Also, it's normal for a perfect goal to work things out and learn along the way.  You will certainly have learned a lot and will be able to take this into account in the next model.  I'm still learning and build some model parts more than once.  So I just built parts of a dump truck unloading device up to 5 times until it finally worked satisfactorily.
Title: Re: The HO Scale Project From Hell
Post by: Bill Gill on September 02, 2023, 05:48:17 AM
Russ, You done good.
Title: Re: The HO Scale Project From Hell
Post by: TRAINS1941 on September 02, 2023, 10:05:52 AM
It's looks great from here!!!!

Well done Unc.

Jerry
Title: Re: The HO Scale Project From Hell
Post by: Ray Dunakin on September 03, 2023, 10:18:16 PM
Wow! Very impressive!
Title: Re: The HO Scale Project From Hell
Post by: Sami on September 05, 2023, 02:10:34 PM
Russ, your work is spectacular ! You did well to persevere
Title: Re: The HO Scale Project From Hell
Post by: finescalerr on September 06, 2023, 12:55:18 AM
Thanks, Sami. -- Russ
Title: Re: The HO Scale Project From Hell
Post by: Barney on September 07, 2023, 01:09:34 PM
Very neat stuff - with fine workmanship
Barney
Title: Re: The HO Scale Project From Hell
Post by: Stuart on September 10, 2023, 09:44:48 PM
Looks very similar to a railroad station that used to exist in Dragoon, Arizona.  Dragoon hardly exists any more but I had a friend who actually lived out there. He sent me a few photos of the station and asked that I extrapolate what I could and recreate a series of scaled drawings for him.  His intention was to build a scale model of it for an outdoor railroad he was building.
 
Stuart
Title: Re: The HO Scale Project From Hell
Post by: finescalerr on September 11, 2023, 12:37:26 AM
The Goleta Depot is a rare, almost textbook example of a Southern Pacific Type 22 design. They built it in 1904 and added an additional freight door front and back a couple of decades later. No two Type 22s are exactly the same, though, depending on the whim of the builders; availability of doors, windows, shingles and siding; length of the top floor ... the list goes on. -- Russ
Title: Re: The HO Scale Project From Hell
Post by: Bernhard on September 12, 2023, 11:49:41 PM
You've built a very nice model there, Russ. I especially like the different structures of the facades. Can you show us a picture of the prototype? I always find the comparison between prototype and model extremely interesting.

Bernhard
Title: Re: The HO Scale Project From Hell
Post by: finescalerr on September 13, 2023, 11:18:19 PM
Here are the earliest photos I have, from 1913. -- Russ