Zippi Posted August 5 Posted August 5 Pretty kewl looking glass house and the ole 32 is coming along nicely there Chris.
David G. Posted August 9 Posted August 9 That is just so cool! You haven't just built a model or diorama, you've built a little world! David G.
Chris B Posted Sunday at 02:56 AM Author Posted Sunday at 02:56 AM So I pulled the phaeton out of the display cabinet this rainy afternoon to discover that the rear wheels have a huge amount of negative caster. I guess the resin has maybe not cured strong enough to hold the weight of the model itself for an extended period of time. The axle seems quite firm and was originally cured under a uv lamp. I don't feel much like making another one even though I do have the mold. After a quick cup of coffee I decided to cut the axle tubes from the center section. I am going to drill a hole through the center of the center section an slide a length of styrene tube with a piece of wire up the center of it for strength and move on. I have never been 100% happy with the look of this axle, to my way of thinking it lacks a little in detail around the center section so I may attempt to add some more detail as well. I'll see how I feel about this once I have sorted the bent axle issue.
FoMoCo66 Posted Sunday at 03:13 AM Posted Sunday at 03:13 AM Ive never resin cast but I have heard that imbeding pice of hard wire through them when you cast them will make it stronger. Also glad that you decided to get back in this one.
Chris B Posted Sunday at 09:07 AM Author Posted Sunday at 09:07 AM Well after spending a little bit of time modifying this axle this afternoon I've decided I really don't like the results. I stumbled upon a chrome center section just randomly laying on a shelf in my display cab net. i have no idea where it came from or what kit it came out of but I played around a bit with it and decided I liked the look. I stuck it in a shot glass of bleach and stripped the chrome from it split it into two halves and gave it a good cleanup, I glued the two halves bvack together and drilled it out to accept the axle tube and I have decided to stick with the enclosed torque tube for a drive shaft. I think I'm liking the results so far, what do you think? 1
Chris B Posted Sunday at 09:50 AM Author Posted Sunday at 09:50 AM (edited) Trimmed things up a little and drilled some holes for the pins I have used to secure the transverse spring to the axle tubes and it all looks like it fits pretty good. Next up will be shock absorbers. I haven't been able to find anything suitable in the parts stash so these at this stage will be scratch built also. Edited Sunday at 09:53 AM by Chris B 2
sidcharles Posted Sunday at 10:47 AM Posted Sunday at 10:47 AM apply some NB castings and call it a banjo.
Chris B Posted yesterday at 07:42 PM Author Posted yesterday at 07:42 PM On 8/31/2025 at 10:47 PM, sidcharles said: apply some NB castings and call it a banjo. Tell me more what are these NB castings?
sidcharles Posted 23 hours ago Posted 23 hours ago i am not sure if he was the originator, but for years the industry standard of Nut/ Bolt & Nut, Bolt, Washer styrene castings was Cliff Grandt, d.b.a Grandt Line Products. finest HO scale window castings & architectural details, too. he passed away and subsequently the line was purchased by Tichy, now Tichy Train Group. they may have scooped up a couple of other manufacturers on the wane. the castings, available in a plethora of sizes & styles, just need a steady hand & hole to plug in to. a dab of adhesive (depending on what's being detailed but always styrene compatible) and on to the next one. expect some loss to the dreaded carpet monster, but that's half the fun. other companies make them. i believe RMCM has some, and oodles of military model manufactures. some are just the heads on a sheet of styrene and you slice them off with no hole needed for application. you can also make your own nuts & washers separately using Plastruct rod (hex, round, rod in graduated size) by bologna slicing and stacking, but i'm too old for such shenanigans. if you've mucho dinero, go for tiny brass. check out some videos:
Chris B Posted 21 hours ago Author Posted 21 hours ago 2 hours ago, sidcharles said: i am not sure if he was the originator, but for years the industry standard of Nut/ Bolt & Nut, Bolt, Washer styrene castings was Cliff Grandt, d.b.a Grandt Line Products. finest HO scale window castings & architectural details, too. he passed away and subsequently the line was purchased by Tichy, now Tichy Train Group. they may have scooped up a couple of other manufacturers on the wane. the castings, available in a plethora of sizes & styles, just need a steady hand & hole to plug in to. a dab of adhesive (depending on what's being detailed but always styrene compatible) and on to the next one. expect some loss to the dreaded carpet monster, but that's half the fun. other companies make them. i believe RMCM has some, and oodles of military model manufactures. some are just the heads on a sheet of styrene and you slice them off with no hole needed for application. you can also make your own nuts & washers separately using Plastruct rod (hex, round, rod in graduated size) by bologna slicing and stacking, but i'm too old for such shenanigans. if you've mucho dinero, go for tiny brass. check out some videos: Ah thanks for the info
stavanzer Posted 20 hours ago Posted 20 hours ago On 8/31/2025 at 2:50 AM, Chris B said: Trimmed things up a little and drilled some holes for the pins I have used to secure the transverse spring to the axle tubes and it all looks like it fits pretty good. Next up will be shock absorbers. I haven't been able to find anything suitable in the parts stash so these at this stage will be scratch built also. Looks Top Rank! I like it.
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