Team Mueller and the Hale o Waihona Lanahu (Coaling Station).
I try to focus our efforts on Hawaiian railroading, and this structure, while fanciful in all respects, draws from both the oldest stone-and-wood mills like the nearby ruins at Kualoa (image) and the real fueling gantry at the old Iwilei yards (image). We used insulation foam as a core, basswood for cladding, craft sticks for battens and decking, egg crate for the coaling deck, signboard and a piece of roofing, and some concrete patch. The basswood cost us about $30, of which we used about 2/3 of the material. As ever, we built to 1:24-ish PLAYMOBIL scale to be consistent with our world and because, to be frank, I really like PLAYMOBIL!
Without further ado, here is a shot as we approach Pu’u’oma’o, where the M&K Sugar Co. and Triple O share engine service facilities at the busy interchange between the mill’s private tracks and the Triple O.
The real OR&L had its facilities in Honolulu. For visual reasons, I am trying to concentrate our large industrial area in our fictional mill town.
Debarking from our train, we can follow a paint crew through the yards, with the imposing structure of the new coaling tower looming above us.
We get a sense of the tight real estate as we walk carefully around the yards. We witness Smokey about to push a now empty gondola from over the receiving pit and the M&K No. 7 Komaka Iki awaiting a load of coal.
Backing away, we see Nuernberg heading an Triple O freight waiting the mainline, while Mike Bananapeal heads off on M&K tracks with the Chiquita Express, part of the M&K’s efforts to expand its product line.
Luckily, @Ray_Dunakin showed up with is new-fangled drone, affording us an opportunity to see how this tower works. Workers push carts of coal out of the doors and along the rails. The crew tips them into the waiting coal bunkers and tenders below. Dropped coal falls all the way into the receiving pit, where the crew can shovel back into tower, onto an internal elevator, and back to the storage bins.
While Ray flies his drone, we wait a few minutes for some of the tracks to clear and walk a ways, but that gives us a chance to see the new coaling facility in full.
We won’t tell the boss that one guy is taking a nap!
At this point, we need to board our train to head out, but, being railfans, and this being the tropics, we arrange a delay and then wrangle permission to climb the coaling station and watch the goings-on in the shared M&K and Triple O engine works, where M&K #12 Komaka Mele is about to undergo some routine maintenance.
OK, that has nothing to do with the build, but with views like that, can you blame the 1:24 guys for being excited about their new facility? Sure beats buckets and shovels!
Thanks for the encouragement during the build and for riding along on our visit to Pu’u’oma’o! Remember, tell your travel agent, “Eh! I like go on the Triple O!”
On behalf of Team Mueller,
Eric