(Click on the small images for the full size view.)
September 30, 2005
Building this car was a fun and interesting project. It was also a very intimidating one. This was my first attempt at building any kind of passenger car. Because I had not built this type of car before, I decided maybe a little "practice" might be in order.
In order to gain some confidence in this area, I purchased an old Tomalco kit for a D&RG narrow gauge passenger car on Ebay. These old kits are the "scratch building project" in a box kind of offering from the early 70's. I worked at building the many sub-assemblies of the kit to get the "feel" for how a passenger car model is built. After getting my feet wet, I felt confident enough to attempt a scratch built model of RGS #0256.
I used the Tomalco plans from the kit, and additional photos of the prototype car to develop plans for my model. The Tomalco "practice" car had been built with wood. I chose to use Evergreen styrene shapes, and siding for my scratch built version. I found the styrene much easier to work with. I used the end platform castings from the Tomalco kit. The trucks are a commercial offering from PBL. The car also has complete under body detailing.
The car roof was a challenge to say the least. I built the roof frame, and covered it with .010 styrene sheeting. I used aluminum duct tape to represent the roof covering. The roof required many hours of work before I had a finished product I could live with. The window frames are scratch built, and glazed with microscope cover slip glass. I also added a complete interior to this car. The interior is made up both scratch built and commercial castings.
While this project seemed intimidating to me at first, I found that a little "practice" with a commercial kit gave me the confidence to attempt a scratch built version. The completed model received 119 points in NMRA judging. The car also won Best-of-Show at the Rocky Mountain Region, NMRA model contest in June of 2005.
Mark L. Evans
If you wish to submit a photo for consideration, send the photo (no larger than 800x600 please) to TJ Klevar along with a description of how you built it, techniques you used, and any special tips you wish pass along.