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Flickr
Gallery
Here she is, finally complete in all her cheese slope-y, SNOTty, 7-wide glory.
I must say Im very please with how she turned out. Shes fully track
compatible and uses the split-pony truck design Ive used before. The folks
that run the real #425 use an auxiliary tender nearly identical to the primary
one as a canteen, so I figured might as well build that one, too.
A big thank you to Ben and his fabulous Blue Big Ben Brick Steam Engine Wheels,
for without them I never would have attempted to build her.
--Tony
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In lugnet.announce.moc, Anthony Sava wrote:
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Flickr
Gallery
Here she is, finally complete in all her cheese slope-y, SNOTty, 7-wide
glory. I must say Im very please with how she turned out. Shes fully track
compatible and uses the split-pony truck design Ive used before. The folks
that run the real #425 use an auxiliary tender nearly identical to the
primary one as a canteen, so I figured might as well build that one, too.
A big thank you to Ben and his fabulous Blue Big Ben Brick Steam Engine
Wheels, for without them I never would have attempted to build her.
--Tony
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Another fantastic job Tony. That second tender really says presence and power.
I cant wait to see what you come up with next.
Chris
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In lugnet.announce.moc, Anthony Sava wrote:
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Flickr
Gallery
Here she is, finally complete in all her cheese slope-y, SNOTty, 7-wide
glory. I must say Im very please with how she turned out. Shes fully track
compatible and uses the split-pony truck design Ive used before. The folks
that run the real #425 use an auxiliary tender nearly identical to the
primary one as a canteen, so I figured might as well build that one, too.
A big thank you to Ben and his fabulous Blue Big Ben Brick Steam Engine
Wheels, for without them I never would have attempted to build her.
--Tony
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Just beautiful Tony! Your decals are great as well; are they just sticker paper?
Im still hoping that I get to see this in person at Brickworld!
-Jeramy
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In lugnet.announce.moc, Anthony Sava wrote:
|
Flickr
Gallery
Here she is, finally complete in all her cheese slope-y, SNOTty, 7-wide
glory. I must say Im very please with how she turned out. Shes fully track
compatible and uses the split-pony truck design Ive used before. The folks
that run the real #425 use an auxiliary tender nearly identical to the
primary one as a canteen, so I figured might as well build that one, too.
A big thank you to Ben and his fabulous Blue Big Ben Brick Steam Engine
Wheels, for without them I never would have attempted to build her.
--Tony
|
As with other trains of yours, this one transcends the line between train and
work of art. I just think its great! Models like this one are a clear
reminder of why the LEGO Train hobby is so great! (as are BBB wheels) Very
nice work!
-Jordan
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In lugnet.trains, Chris van Lottum wrote:
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In lugnet.announce.moc, Anthony Sava wrote:
|
Flickr
Gallery
Here she is, finally complete in all her cheese slope-y, SNOTty, 7-wide
glory. I must say Im very please with how she turned out. Shes fully
track compatible and uses the split-pony truck design Ive used before. The
folks that run the real #425 use an auxiliary tender nearly identical to the
primary one as a canteen, so I figured might as well build that one, too.
A big thank you to Ben and his fabulous Blue Big Ben Brick Steam Engine
Wheels, for without them I never would have attempted to build her.
--Tony
|
Another fantastic job Tony. That second tender really says presence and
power. I cant wait to see what you come up with next.
Chris
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Thanks much! My next project is the PRR T-1 Duplex.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/savatheaggie/2497592408/
--Tony
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In lugnet.trains, Jeramy Spurgeon wrote:
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In lugnet.announce.moc, Anthony Sava wrote:
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Flickr
Gallery
Here she is, finally complete in all her cheese slope-y, SNOTty, 7-wide
glory. I must say Im very please with how she turned out. Shes fully
track compatible and uses the split-pony truck design Ive used before. The
folks that run the real #425 use an auxiliary tender nearly identical to the
primary one as a canteen, so I figured might as well build that one, too.
A big thank you to Ben and his fabulous Blue Big Ben Brick Steam Engine
Wheels, for without them I never would have attempted to build her.
--Tony
|
Just beautiful Tony! Your decals are great as well; are they just sticker
paper?
Im still hoping that I get to see this in person at Brickworld!
-Jeramy
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Thanks much! My decals are Photo Sticker Paper, available at Office Depot.
Its a pain in the butt to peel the backs off the stickers, since you have to
cut your own custom sizes without pre-set perforations, but worth it.
Things arent looking good for Brickworld and me this year, but who knows.
Hopefully next year will bring better luck.
--Tony
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In lugnet.trains, Jordan Schwarz wrote:
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In lugnet.announce.moc, Anthony Sava wrote:
|
Flickr
Gallery
Here she is, finally complete in all her cheese slope-y, SNOTty, 7-wide
glory. I must say Im very please with how she turned out. Shes fully
track compatible and uses the split-pony truck design Ive used before. The
folks that run the real #425 use an auxiliary tender nearly identical to the
primary one as a canteen, so I figured might as well build that one, too.
A big thank you to Ben and his fabulous Blue Big Ben Brick Steam Engine
Wheels, for without them I never would have attempted to build her.
--Tony
|
As with other trains of yours, this one transcends the line between train and
work of art. I just think its great! Models like this one are a clear
reminder of why the LEGO Train hobby is so great! (as are BBB wheels) Very
nice work!
-Jordan
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Wow, thanks much! I dont think Im deserving of such high praise, but I
appreciate it. Id have never gotten into the train hobby had it not been for
Ben and his BBB Wheels.
--Tony
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In lugnet.announce.moc, Anthony Sava wrote:
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Flickr
Gallery
Here she is, finally complete in all her cheese slope-y, SNOTty, 7-wide
glory. I must say Im very please with how she turned out. Shes fully track
compatible and uses the split-pony truck design Ive used before. The folks
that run the real #425 use an auxiliary tender nearly identical to the
primary one as a canteen, so I figured might as well build that one, too.
A big thank you to Ben and his fabulous Blue Big Ben Brick Steam Engine
Wheels, for without them I never would have attempted to build her.
--Tony
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Nice build, I like the detailing under the running boards on the engineers
side. I saw the flickr comment on the pilot. One idea might be to flip the mech
arms upside down (so they bend upward) in the middle of the pilot and/or at the
transition point.
Benn
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