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This desk top photo shows four of the five gondolas completed in this
project. The two outer cars were completed in Part One; the two inner
cars are the subject of this post. |
Or, How To Make Use of That Kit You Really Didn't Want to Assemble.
Commentary by Peter Mumby, with Photos by George Dutka.
In
Part One of this exercise (The Rapido Gondola Project, Jan. 10, 2016)
we described painting and weathering three undecorated Rapido gondolas
and their loads. We each did one CP car, plus I finished a Pacific
Great Eastern gon as well. George later got to thinking that he would
enjoy adding a similar PGE car to his fleet, and I decided to keep him
company by completing a car with a tie load to complement the rail load
of my initial effort. While George was contemplating the type of load
he would prefer, he happened to pull out an old Westerfield hopper car
kit from his inventory. This was one of the early kits made from the
resin that was practically impervious to a sanding stick or a drill bit,
and George indicated that he really didn't intend to assemble it any
time soon. The suggestion was then made that the loose resin parts
would make an effective scrap metal load for his car; this is what he
decided to do, and I think it was a kit well sacrificed.
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Why is George's Rapido car posed on a Westerfield box? This is the
donor kit that provided the car's convincing scrap metal load! |
This
little project was probably our swan song for the current modelling
season. According to the calendar, it is just about time for George to
put away his Canopy Cement and his weathering powders, and get out his
deck shoes, his sextant, and his copy of Chapman's Piloting,
Seamanship,and Small Boat Handling. Before he heads off to Lake Huron
for the summer, he will remove his 1950s-era locomotives and rolling
stock from the layout and put them in his storage cabinet. He does have
a small fleet of "modern" equipment which will populate the layout for
the next few months, in case summertime visitors materialize. I guess
this new PGE car, with its ACI label and wheel dot, fits this modern
era, and will get to spend the summer on the layout. I'll leave it up
to George to concoct the story about how this strange visitor from the
Pacific coast found its way onto the White River Division!
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This overhead view provides another perspective on George's "Memories of Westerfield Hopper Kit" scrap metal load. |
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This photo bears witness to George's seasonal transition from railway modeller to Great Lakes sailor. |
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The trio of PGE gondolas are on the tail end of a CP local. The CP caboose is a True Line Trains offering. |
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A look inside Peter's gondola which is loaded with some ties. |