My effort to flesh out
structures on my railroad tends to move around the main level, addressing
whatever building or buildings I feel like working on at any given time. Often that means I work on a structure set
where I have finally thought through what I want and how to accomplish that
with materials (kits or other supplies) I have on hand or can acquire
quickly. That process moved me around
from Eugene to Springfield for the latest effort.
Timber Products, also known
as Clear Fir, was a door and window maker in Springfield with a pair of spurs
near the depot. They had ceased manufacturing
efforts in Springfield by the 1970’s, but in my time-warping take on the
industrial scene, I wanted to use those spurs for railroad shipments, including
the inbound materials on the spur that extended behind the depot through
Tilbury Cement. The one photo and
description of Timber Products’ Springfield facility that I had access to was
pretty generic for Western Oregon industries.
I was content with “Imagineering” a set of structures to fill the space.
I used a pair of Walthers Cornerstone
™ kits as the basis for my version of Timber
Products.—two of the Planing Mill and Shed (933-3059) and one Midstate Marble
Products (933-3073). In both cases, I
used some of the kit components, saving others for other projects. I assembled the main building of the Midstate
Marble Products kit pretty much as Walthers designed it. I also used the outdoor overhead travelling
crane from the kit. Both are used as
part of the materials intake portion of the industry.
Completed structures for
Timber Products/Clear Fir in Springfield.
Note Tilbury Cement in the background on the same spur as the rear
portion of Timber Products.
One choice I had to make was
a paint scheme. The single photo I had
was black and white. It showed a medium
tone building with white trim.
Originally, I was going to go with a light olive paint for the base
color—right up until I noticed the nearby Tilbury Cement already was a very similar
color. Tilbury Cement was NOT going to
be repainted. Further, Tilbury Cement is
on the same spur as the materials intake for Timber Products. I needed to distinguish the two
companies. Instead, I chose a
light-medium gray for the base color, retaining white for trim.
I used the Walthers Planing Mill
building as the basis for the second structure of the Timber Products
complex. The Walthers kit builds a
two-story structure. Befitting Western
Oregon, I wanted a single-story structure, albeit longer. The solution was to cut down a pair of the
kit building sides and splice them together.
Along the way, I added freight doors and modified a pair of the windows
for the loading dock area. The board and
batten siding provided convenient guides and disguises for the splice joints.
Walthers Planing Mill kit
sides cut apart, pending reassembly as the structure I wanted.
Kit-bashed mill structure in
the foreground. I used the spare pair of
upper end pieces to provide additional roof support. Conventional assembly of Midstate Marble
Products structure is in the rear.
A major challenge was
splicing the corrugated roofing for the longer structure. The corrugations provide both a natural
cutting guide and a splicing challenge. In
the end, I found it better to cut from the underside, using a combination
square to guide the cut. Although I used
a razor saw for some of the cuts, I also found a scribing action with the
reverse edge of an Xacto blade was very effective and efficient with the soft
plastic Walthers has these kits molded in.
My NWSL TrueSander ™ was an important tool for cleaning up the
cuts.
When I spliced the roof
sections, I found I still had distortions at the splice joints. The solution to this was weathering to help
disguise the joint. Much of the corrugated
iron siding in Walthers structures does not provide the texture relief of panel
edges. Real corrugated iron siding and
roofing comes in panels that are applied with a slight overlap of a ridge and
valley. Older (weathered) corrugated
siding and roofing displays these overlaps by rust streaks and an accumulation
of grime.
Although I have tediously
weathered such rust and grime effects with paint in past efforts, I decided to
try something much simpler. I
experimented using Primsacolor pencils.
This puts color onto the corrugation ridges instead of the valleys where
nature puts it. Nonetheless, from
typical viewing distances of more than a couple of feet, the effect is the same—alternating
strips of “natural” metal and rust or grime.
Use of the pencils was very
easy, quick and controllable. I used a
strip of ¼ inch wide Evergreen strip to guide me to the next panel line. The panel line was done with a light umber
(PC 941) pencil. This was followed by
shading of the lower portion of a panel with the same pencil. Lighter, more recent rust effects were done
above this base using a burnt ochre (PC 943) pencil. The entire process went very quickly, even on
large corrugation areas.
Weathering Timber Products
corrugated roof sections in process. Note
that the splice joint near the middle of both panels nearly disappears.
A quick note on the rest of
the process. I found I could use
Rustoleum ™ rattle can spray paint for the base coat. I
sprayed aluminum and then did a light misting with an “Aged Gray Chalk” spray. This latter spray does not completely cover
the aluminum base. Indeed, it is useful
to introduce streaking with this very light spray coat. The objective was to
dull down the aluminum base coat, but leave enough of the reflective glint to
give the illusion of galvanized metal.
After this treatment dried, I sprayed Testors Dulcote ™. Once this dried, I began the weathering
process with the Primsacolor pencils. A
final coat of Dulcote sealed the surface.
The roof panels were attached
to their respective structures with Pacer Formula 560 ™ canopy
glue. This has become my favorite
adhesive for joining dissimilar materials or, as in this case, painted
surfaces. Though this glue looks like
white glue, it is very good for these uses.
It dries clear—hence its use by aircraft modelers to attach clear
canopies. It has a modest-length working
and setting time—slow enough to position parts, but fast enough to satisfy a
desire for instant gratification. That
slower setting feature, contrasting to CA adhesives, was very important to
getting roof sections into position on the core structure and joined at the
ridge line.
Another view of the core
structures for Timber Products/Clear Fir.
I still am working with where
to place the chip bins (the dark green structures alongside both mill buildings
in the photos). Once I have settled on
the overall scene, I will install the piping for wood chips.
Another element needed for
this scene was a pair of loading docks.
Both were simply built using Evergreen styrene strip and V-groove
siding. In both cases, I found I could
quickly paint them using Rustoleum tan camouflage spray paint and another light
misting use of the Chalked Aged Gray.
Later on, I applied additional weathering to the front loading dock
using both an acrylic weathering cream and an alcohol and paint wash.
For now, the major pieces are
in place, filling a big empty space in my Springfield scene.
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