Don Janes is working away on his SuperTree with a soldering iron. |
Welcome, follow along with George Dutka in his journal which documents the additions and future thoughts for the HO scale White River Division model railroad and to his continuing historical New England railroad research. The White River Division is now in its 17th modeler's season. The "modeler's season" runs from November to April each year. Inspiration comes from the Boston and Maine, Rutland and Central Vermont Railway during the 1950's with additional posts by Don Janes and Peter Mumby.
I too used this method as well following Marty's advice. It certainly seems odd, putting a soldering iron on a Super Trees branch. But I agree, it really does work!
ReplyDeleteHi Mike...your right...I was really surprised to see Don do this and it actually works. I have a lot of bent trees that I can now put to use...cheers...George
DeleteI too have "soldered" many a bent Super Tree with considerable success. The odd one on which I was over zealous became bushes. I then followed up with Tony Koester's method of spray painting them with cheap gray primer and right afterwards a shot of Elmer's spray glue (Tony uses hair spray) for adhering the Noch leaves. A lot of trees can be produced outdoors on a sunny afternoon at the cottage.
ReplyDeleteTrick is to "dab" the iron in a couple of places along the bent part of the trunk while placing slight downward pressure on a firm surface - like Don is showing in the photo. At first it will seem like you're sawing every tree in half - but anyone should get the technique down pretty quickly.
ReplyDeleteThanks for your input Marty...I actually tried it yesterday as I needed a few trees for an area in Bellows Falls I am currently working on...I took a tree that was really bent (almost into a U)...all went well with the few I did...George
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