With three of the industries in Randolph finished except for a few minor details, I began to build General Tire And Rubber, the final industry. I decided to use a Timberline II kit, a two story brick warehouse, kit 1004-2495, that arrived as a surprise package from my good friend George Toman. When I asked George about the surprise package he explained the kit was left to him by a friend that had recently passed. He now had two warehouse kits since he already had the kit. When he read my blog post on changes to Tunnel City in which I said I was going to add the Randolph expansion, he sent the Timberline II warehouse kit guessing I might be able to use it in Randolph. He guessed right.
When I saw the the photo of the built warehouse on the box cover with the unique exterior trusses and dock hoist, I knew I wanted to build the warehouse kit to house a customer in Randolph. My excitement to build the warehouse kit took a hit when I opened the kit to exam the contents. The Timberline II warehouse kit contents are building sides and ends printed on ten ply card, thin cardboard ( named RR board in the kit) for roof and floors, scale lumber, embossed brick paper, white metal castings of windows, doors and other detail parts, drawings of each side and an isometric drawing 1/2 HO scale with letters on the drawing to indicate the part involved and numbers to indicate the step in the instructions.
After looking at the kit drawings of the warehouse I knew the sides were the length I needed and one end was the correct width; however, the other was not as I needed it to be shorter. The kit drawings were for a building with a rectangle footprint and my allotted space footprint for General Tire And Rubber was for a convex quadrilateral referred to as a trapezoid building footprint. I would need to make a cardboard footprint of the building to assemble the warehouse in the modified shape I wanted after I positioned the dock.
Before I started the General Tire And Rubber building I started with the trackside dock. I found the kit dock scribed decking; however, I did not want to cut all the wood posts and framing from the scale lumber to build the sub structure. Therefore, I looked through my saved building parts from prior kits and found plastic molded dock framing with posts attached. The plastic framing was for a longer dock then the kit dock drawing which had the dock only the length of the building. I liked the longer length as I wanted to connect the hoist dock on end of the building with the one on trackside. I glued the wood dock decking to the plastic framing with Testors tube cement. Of all the glues I use, I still find Testors tube cement is the best for attaching wood to plastic. To locate the dock, I determined the dock distance from the track with a National Model Railroad Association (NMRA) track gauge and set it in place.
Plastic dock posts and framing with kit wood decking. |
With dock in place, I used cardboard to make a footprint template for General Tire And Rubber building to help with assembly. The square attached to the trapezoid footprint is for space to be occupied by the hoist dock on the end of the building.
Cardboard footprint template I made to help warehouse assembly. |
I began the build of the warehouse by cutting out the sides, ends and roof elevator shaft enclosure from the printed cards with a Xacto knife with a #11 blade followed by cutting out the windows and doors from the cut out sides and end. Embossed brick paper was glued to the card sides and ends with rubber cement. Openings for the windows and doors were made by making a vertical cut from the interior in the middle of the brick paper covering the opening and a cut across the top and bottom of the each opening with Xacto knife with #11 blade. The brick paper was now folded and glued to the inside ( interior side) of the card openings. I changed from rubber cement to Elmers white glue for this task. Three buildings sides, the long side blank wall, trackside wall and short hoist wall had the kit scale lumber foundation glued to them and then they were glued together with Elmer’s white glue.
The brick paper covered sides were colored with Primsacolor pencils: tuscan red, PC937 and dark umber, PC947. Pan Pastel neutral grey, # 820.5, was applied over the colored brick walls with a cotton swab. Again, the brick paper was colored with the Prismacolor pencils. Pilasters on the building, kit lumber with brick paper covering three sides, were installed and colored as other brick described above.
Three walls glued together after window and door openings made and walls glued to foundation. |
The brick paper covered sides were colored with Primsacolor pencils: tuscan red, PC937 and dark umber, PC947. Pan Pastel neutral grey, # 820.5, was applied over the colored brick walls with a cotton swab. Again, the brick paper was colored with the Prismacolor pencils. Pilasters on the building, kit lumber with brick paper covering three sides, were installed and colored as other brick described above.
Interior bracing provided in the kit was cut to fit with a Northwest Shortline chopper and installed. Floors and roof cut from heavy cardboard to replace the thin RR card provided in the kit were installed. Since floors were tightly fitted to the building walls, a cut was made in their length to allow removal after doors and windows installed.
Interior bracing and removable bottom floor installed. |
Cardboard floors installed in the interior. Front wall with windows and doors not yet cut out sits in front. |
I continued the build of the building by completing the front wall of the building even if it would face the backdrop when in place. Wood kit parts were cut and fitted for the stone trim. The roof was covered with 320 black wet/dry sandpaper attached with rubber cement. The elevator shaft enclosure walls were covered with the brick paper and the roof with the same sandpaper as the main roof. Roof trusses, a unique feature of building, were glued up from the kit wood parts modified to the new roof footprint size.
The dock and dock hoist, a second unique feature of the kit, were built next. I cut the scale kit lumber per drawings for the dock posts, framing and attached the scribed wood decking. In my scale lumber supply I used matching scribed wood to complete the trackside dock decking and the connection I wanted from the hoist dock to it. On the front of the trackside dock I installed the post bracing in a different pattern then used on the Food Producers building next door. The kit white metal castings for the hoist frame were installed and painted with Model Master steel, # 1780.
Back wall, roof with trusses, end dock and hoist view. |
Dock bracing on the two building docks is a different pattern. |
Now I sprayed the windows and doors using a Color-Place rattle can with a fast dry paint color called fire red. While the windows were drying I installed steps from the parts box on the end of the trackside dock and stained the docks with FloquiI Oak (S123) Flo-Stain and dirty Dio-Sol thinner. The brick wall portions showing above the roof were covered with brick paper and colored to match the exterior brick walls. I finished the exterior roof trusses by adding the wire to represent the truss rods and installed the kit white metal castings for the rod plate and blots. A roof access hatch was cut from kit lumber, painted to match windows and doors and installed.
Once the windows and doors were dry I installed them in the opening from the interior with the exception of the office doors installed from the outside. The wood lintels for windows and doors and the window sills were cut from the scale lumber with NWSL chopper and installed with Elmers white glue and painted PollyScale Depot Buff. The diamonds at the top of the pilasters are white metal castings provided in the kit.
Docks are stained. Windows with lintels and stiles and doors with lintels installed in front wall. Wood trusses have details added. |
The trackside dock roof was next. I installed the kit provided roof brackets, white metal castings , on the building and attached the wood roof. I decided to cover the wood roof with Campbell Scale Models corrugated aluminum roofing, #801. I attached the Campbell corrugated roofing with barge cement. The corrugated roofing was painted with Model Master steel #1780.
Trackside dock wood roof installed. |
After the wood trackside roof was installed I stained the roof trusses with Floquil Oak stain and dirty Dio-Sol paint thinner while the glue set. It was the same method I used to stain the decks except I also used some of sediment "gunk" from the bottom of the Dio-Sol bottle to make the trusses darker than the docks.
I assembled the block and tackle for the dock hoist. I replaced the kit piano wire to be used for the chain with 50 links of brass chain gifted me by Bill Welch. I also added the metal chimney and vent details to the roof.
Block and Tackle with chain added to pulleys installed on hoist. |
Final roof details added and block and tackle painted. |
With. General Tire And Rubber building now complete I wanted to get the backdrop installed. The backdrop is 1/8 inch masonite finished on one side. I cut masonite backdrop sections 18 1/2 inches wide from 2 x 4 feet pieces purchased at the local home improvement store. The finished railroad side is painted sky blue and the back side to match the layout room area. The backdrop is installed with fourteen inches above the benchwork and four and one-half inches under the benchwork fascia. The four and one-half inches of backdrop under the benchwork fascia rest on the bottom screws attaching the fascia and are secured with the top fascia screws which also pass through it.
Backdrop painted sky blue installed behind Randolph as viewed from the Randolph Glass Plant end. |
Backdrop painted sky blue installed behind Randolph as viewed from the Wildung Team Track end. |
Backdrop is inserted resting on bottom fascia screws. Top fascia screws also pass through backdrop to hold it in place. |
While the painted backdrop was drying I built and installed the end of road guard on the end of the road next to the track for the road serving the Food Producers and Randolph Anchor Glass. I built the end of road guard using dimensions provided on drawing in NMRA data sheet, Streets And Roads, D2g, issued April 1957.
My Randolph expansion is ready for the Minneapolis & Northland Railroad Company to begin serving the new customers gained. And, it is ready to exchange cars with the Chicago Great Western connection there. With a card box, phone and drink holder installed on the Randolph fascia, all that remains is to makeup the necessary waybills to create the customer traffic for operating sessions.
Not a lot of freight cars yet as waybills for the Randolph industries need to be made. |
Phone, card box and fold up drink up holder installed on Randolph fascia. |
Work table and throttle holder added to fascia. And, a few new cars coming to the railroad. |
Another, “Thank You” to George Toman for providing the Timberline II warehouse kit to build the General Tire And Rubber building and Bill Welch for the 50 links per inch brass chain used for the block and tackle on the Timberline II hoist.
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Lester Breuer
Looking good, Lester! You've been busy! Greg Bueltmann, Gary IN
ReplyDeleteLooks great, nice work
ReplyDelete