Ken Brunt said:
That’s what you need, Ric, “Have Layout, Will Travel”…(http://www.largescalecentral.com/externals/tinymce/plugins/emoticons/img/smiley-wink.gif)
We have that, different format, different trailer design. Real different.
Ken Brunt said:
That’s what you need, Ric, “Have Layout, Will Travel”…(http://www.largescalecentral.com/externals/tinymce/plugins/emoticons/img/smiley-wink.gif)
We have that, different format, different trailer design. Real different.
Ric
Can you share with us what you have as in trailer.
Dennis
Making a walking bridge
This is the safest way to make many of pieces of the same size, tape together with tape, then run through either table saw or bandsaw
Fitting the walkway into the foam, before the legs are placed on the walkway
The walk bridge finished
Dennis Rayon said:
Ric
Can you share with us what you have as in trailer.
Dennis
The Guys that have made it to York, see our traveling “Timesaver” and “Inglenook” puzzles. Yes, this year the “Inglenook” didn’t make it, because of space and being rebuilt. The last number of years it has traveled in AndyC’s pickup. However, for many years it traveled in a van and can be hauled in most SUV’s. It folds and becomes crates for travel and separates and displays with clamps holding the sections together.
I was answering Ken’s reply and certainly don’t want to take away from this thread. Really think the trailer layout is a unique display for the hobby.
Yep …no trailer just all packed into a vehicle. Ric and Andy were conjoined at birth and cannot help it but they do fantastic! Nothing like you are doing though Dennis.
Adding a trestle in
Getting it all to fit in, cutting the foam, the base underneath is at an angle, fitting each bent leg
Here it is finished
Well done. Do you make house calls?
Too bad the background rock is so dark … It hides the nice trestle!
Tracks crossing each other, ledges hanging out, for future shacks
Dennis
We have added some of the structures, we added a watermill, one evening I thought I need to do some work on the foam in the front
There is this section that was built up for the lower track, to be built up left us with this large flat vertical wall, not knowing for sure what to do to it to look good. One evening I was working on this and knew it was 30 minutes to supper, so I jumped in and did a small section. As some of us guys knows when our wives labor to make supper, we are not to be late. so I started with this.
So 20 minutes later I had this
And I was not later for supper
You guys are something else. This is the kind of thing people dream up and talk about but never actually attempt…except for you!
20 minutes…
i think, Dennis should be blocked. for disturbing the peace here.
(making everybody feel inferior with his speed!)
i need 20 minutes for searching tools and opening the glue-pot alone…
LOL Korm. It usually takes me that long to get motivated, turn on the lights in the shop, and try and figure out where the parts for the current project is.
Thanks guys for your Compliments
Dennis
Wow that is impressive. I love how you can really add tons of details and yet simple to put up. Do you plan on installing overhead lights for evenings? You can come to Jersey and set that up at my club meet in June