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Re: Bridge over the River Wye
Posted: Sat Jul 04, 2009 12:01 pm
by philipat
nice work
Re: Bridge over the River Wye
Posted: Sat Jul 04, 2009 1:00 pm
by Matdragon
very good work on the bridge there..
the trains ... OO guage ? Hornby ? i too have that
Matt
Re: Bridge over the River Wye
Posted: Sat Jul 04, 2009 3:41 pm
by wibblywobbly
I build a 1/16 tank bridge and people ask me about trains! ::)
I started off with Hornby but soon realised that Bachmann was better quality, they were also consistent with their couplings etc. It became addictive, and with loksound equipped loco's at £130-150 a throw, plus rolling stock, I was spending a fortune. You can add all of the layout costs, scenery, buildings, trees, lichen, paint, figures, and track. I would love to build a really huge complex layout someday, when I have the space and the cash, but until then I am sticking with the tanks, they are good value for money.
I also dabbled in RC helicopters..OMG that 'was' money down the drain, also did RC Rock crawlers and ended up scratch building a Paris Dakar truck with lights etc which was cool, and I had a couple of nitro MT2's, a G3 and an 18SS, both were hopped up with all the trick bits and were a lot of fun, but there is nowhere around here to run them??
I liked all of it, I love models!
RC Rock Crawler Dakar Race Truck
Rob G
Re: Bridge over the River Wye
Posted: Sun Jul 05, 2009 9:44 pm
by Wight
That bridge looks great.
Been thinking of doing one for a while and yours is great inspiration.
Re: Bridge over the River Wye
Posted: Mon Jul 06, 2009 12:06 pm
by wibblywobbly
It's looking a bit more like a bridge now. Still hasn't cost me a bean, but I may have to buy some more tile cement to do the walls on the ramps.
The road surface was a challenge. In the end I coated the base with undiluted UPVA, then sprinkled topsoil (yes, out of the garden) onto it. When that was almost dry I completely soaked the whole surface with diluted UPVA (50/50) so that it was really runny. Then I sprinkled more topsoil on, but finer stuff this time.
Next, as it was looking a bit bland, and while the whole surface was still white and swimming in glue, I got some white talcum powder and sprinkled that down the centerline, and down each side. I stippled this in with a paintbrush.
When that had dried out a bit, but still really wet, I diluted some black acrylic and let it drip onto the parts where tank tracks would run. It gave a sort of crazed effect.
The next morning when it was 90% dry, I ran my 13lb Tiger backwards and forwards across it so that it left track marks in the 'mud'. Now that it has dried it looks like a muddy bridge that has been used as a crossing point for tracked vehicles.
I need to get the ramps done the same way, but I am off to Germany 8-14th, so I won't be able to do a great deal until after I get back. I am thinking of mounting the whole thing on a modular plywood base, and building some rocks, and slopes around it, maybe a machine gun emplacement or two as well.
I knew that it would never end with a simple wooden bridge!
Re: Bridge over the River Wye
Posted: Wed Jul 08, 2009 9:55 pm
by philipat
Very cool. Nicely done.
One question: what is UPVA? I assume a glue, but what does the acronym break out to?
Re: Bridge over the River Wye
Posted: Wed Jul 08, 2009 10:03 pm
by Ex_Pat_Tanker
Something like 'Elmers' glue

Re: Bridge over the River Wye
Posted: Wed Jul 08, 2009 11:21 pm
by BREL
UPVA better known as wood glue
see this link to find out more information
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polyvinyl_acetate
Re: Bridge over the River Wye
Posted: Thu Jul 09, 2009 12:43 am
by Matdragon
very nicely done, hope you dont mind me moving this thread to the new shiny board specifically for this kinda thing
cheers, keep it up!
Matt
Re: Bridge over the River Wye
Posted: Thu Jul 09, 2009 11:32 pm
by philipat
Thanks. Always something simple that I didn't think of. ::)
