Subject:
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Re: 8-wides coming around soon
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Newsgroups:
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lugnet.trains
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Date:
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Tue, 5 Jun 2001 22:18:41 GMT
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Viewed:
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465 times
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In lugnet.trains, Christopher Masi writes:
> Josh Baakko wrote:
> >
> > I'm starting work on some 8-wides now, but I've built a few 6 wide
> > containers. I'm interested how other people build containers for 8-wides?
> > For all of my trains I've decided to count 1 stud as 2 feet to make train
> > cars shorter (only used on trains). That way an SD90MAC, which is 109' would
> > be rounded down to 108, and divided by 2 to make 54 it studs long. So my
> > first container is 6x10 to make it a 20' container, but to match my
> > semitrailers (at 5 blocks tall they look very strange. So i went with 4 now
> > they look short, so i'm going for 1 or 2 plates in there. Has anyone else
> > built a 6 wide container, or does eveyone still use 4 wide containers?
> >
> > (wow, thats long...)
> > Josh
>
> My containers are pretty big. The 40' long containers are 32 studs long (1
> stud = 1.25 ft), 6 studs wide, and 5 bricks and 2 plates tall. I make my
> containers a little shorter than my truck trailers. My 40' truck trailer is 32
> studs long, 6 studs wide, and 6 bricks and 2 plates tall. I have notice (or at
> least I think I have noticed) that containers are shorter(height) than truck
> trailers; that is why I made my truck trailer 6 bricks 2 plates tall. I wanted a
> minifig to be able to stand inside a container, so my minimum height for a
> container was 5 bricks 2 plates tall.
>
> I think you need to be flexible in your scaling(compression). I say I build at
> 1 stud = 1.25 feet, but I use that as a guideline, not as a rule. For my rolling
> stock, I try to keep close to the scale so that everything looks right together,
> but for my engines I'll fudge the scale to work details in what looks like the
> right places. For me, that meant going longer on my SD40-2 than my scale says it
> should be. Violating my own scaling, my 67' long SD40-2 is 59 studs long.[1] You
> are probably going to have to compress your SD90MAC, and that makes sense. By my
> scale it would be 87 studs long. That would just be too big. Whether or not 1
> stud = 2 feet is too extreme is up to you, but for a 50' long box car, 1 stud =
> 2 feet will look strange (in my opinion) because it will be the same length as
> many of its 6-wide cousins.
>
> One of the best things about building 8-wide is the size of the models. When
> an 8-wide model is done, it is big, and it makes a big impression. That is why I
> kept building 8-wide after my first try. This is also the down side of building
> 8-wide. Because the models are big, it is harder (for me) to get the "long train
> on a long straight away" feel.
>
> Chris
>
>
> 1. They are 67' long...right?
Not sure... I thought it was longer, ...
But anyways, if i build a 50 foot boxcar I'll go with a longer mesurement.
My major problem is the containers & the huge cars 7 locos (SD90MAC & 89'
auto haulers). I'd like to build the containers the same size, or close to
the same size as you said above. But that would cause the container cars to
be accesively large, and look dumb next to an SD90MAC, the car would end up
being about 50 studs.
Josh
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Message has 1 Reply: | | Re: 8-wides coming around soon
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| (...) snip all my previous comments (...) Yeah, those long cars are going to be a problem. I want to build an autorack,[1] and like you said, they are 89'. By my scale that would be 71 studs (gulp).I'll have to scale that down a bit (...) (23 years ago, 6-Jun-01, to lugnet.trains)
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Message is in Reply To:
| | Re: 8-wides coming around soon
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| (...) My containers are pretty big. The 40' long containers are 32 studs long (1 stud = 1.25 ft), 6 studs wide, and 5 bricks and 2 plates tall. I make my containers a little shorter than my truck trailers. My 40' truck trailer is 32 studs long, 6 (...) (23 years ago, 5-Jun-01, to lugnet.trains)
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