A Rookie and La Belle Kits
silent_11111
Howdy folks, I went by my "local" (if you call 200 miles away local) shop today to pick up some gaming supplies. At about $10 each, they were tempting to me as the going price for Blackstone passenger cars is "hefty"... I looked in the boxes and all the little wooden pieces made me a bit nervous. I've never built any HOn3 car kits or any model train kit cars. Would it be safe to start with La Belle kits or are they more of an advanced modeller thing? Would the MRGS kits be a better place to start?
Thanks for any input.
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Ken Vandevoort <apo09324@...>
If I could find La Belle HOn3 kits for $10, I would grab them. They may be advanced, but follow the instructions and take your time.
Ken Vandevoort
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John Stutz
If you are nervous about assembling the LaBelle kits, their website has about a dozen short illustrated articles on proven techniques for working on wood kits in general, and specifically on assembling LaBelle passenger cars. These are available as downloadable .pdf files. No charge if you download them yourself. John Stutz
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Short of ten tank cars my entire fleet, around 100+/-, are wood kits. Take your time and double check yourself. Before long instructions will be a guide only.
-- Paul Buhrke D&RGW Salida Division Lost in the Black Canyon in 1929
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Labelle kits are awesome. at $10.00 a piece buy them all. new passenger car kits kits cost in the neighborhood of $60.00 These are advanced kits, that said I build one 50 years ago, and did well enough that it still lives on as a shed, and would be in service had I not done some very weird kit bashing to make it into a steam coach, my favorite passenger cars are all built from Labelle kits, and thier freight cars are not shabby either. the materials are outstanding, the process is relatively simple, shaping the bullnose at the end of the celestory roof is the most challenging part of the build, requiring careful shaping , they give you a jig to check the shape. I got some self adhesive sand paper, sand paper and stuck it to a scrap piece of plywood, and working with coarse sand paper first worked bit by bit on the curve. In todays world finding the appropriate passenger trucks may be a challenge. Seriously if you could get ten of these kits, you will be quite good at building them before you are done. as a freshly retired guy with too many residences, and little to no budget, I’m quite jealous of this opportunity, go for it, before someone else does. Bill Nelson (AKA Arthur, and Willie Nelson)
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Mike Chamberlain
They aren"t that hard to assemble , the hardest part is the roof that you will have to carve the ends ............Mike
On Fri, Sep 11, 2020 at 11:34 AM Bill Nelson <dgccandwrr@...> wrote:
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Remember, you can always use the mrgs version to avoid carving the duckbills: lloyd lehrer, MANHATTAN BEACH, CA (310)951-9097
On Fri, Sep 11, 2020 at 9:01 AM Mike Chamberlain <mikec6201@...> wrote:
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lloyd lehrer
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silent_11111
Thanks for the suggestions and advice everyone. I'll grab them next time I head out that way. Paul
On Friday, September 11, 2020, 10:34:13 AM CDT, Bill Nelson <dgccandwrr@...> wrote: Labelle kits are awesome. at $10.00 a piece buy them all. new passenger car kits kits cost in the neighborhood of $60.00 These are advanced kits, that said I build one 50 years ago, and did well enough that it still lives on as a shed, and would be in service had I not done some very weird kit bashing to make it into a steam coach, my favorite passenger cars are all built from Labelle kits, and thier freight cars are not shabby either. the materials are outstanding, the process is relatively simple, shaping the bullnose at the end of the celestory roof is the most challenging part of the build, requiring careful shaping , they give you a jig to check the shape. I got some self adhesive sand paper, sand paper and stuck it to a scrap piece of plywood, and working with coarse sand paper first worked bit by bit on the curve. In todays world finding the appropriate passenger trucks may be a challenge. Seriously if you could get ten of these kits, you will be quite good at building them before you are done. as a freshly retired guy with too many residences, and little to no budget, I’m quite jealous of this opportunity, go for it, before someone else does. Bill Nelson (AKA Arthur, and Willie Nelson)
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LARRY KLOSE
I built my first LaBelle kit shortly after the passenger cars were introduced—I still remember the issue of Model Railroader with a photo of the introductory kit on the cover, January 1960. I was 13 and I built the same kit as reviewed with little difficulty. It was one of the first really complex craft kits I built. I had few problems and it came out fine. I think the kits are a good starter as long as the instructions are followed. Painting will be the most difficult thing to deal with; as a nearly all wood kit it will need either solvent based paints or an application of either sanding sealer or primer before painting with acrylics to discourage warping and raised grain.
I’ve found that just jumping in and doing it is the best way to get going.
Good luck!
Larry
PS: According to the review that kit retailed for $4.95, postpaid.
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Randy Hees
I always used shellac... which can be purchased at any home center in a spray bomb.... Shellac is alcohol based. Randy Hees
On Fri, Sep 11, 2020 at 4:06 PM LARRY KLOSE <lklose@...> wrote:
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Curtis Brookshire
I highly recommend LaBelle's roof rounding kits for shaping the roof. You can find them on the website under button 3 parts and accessories. They're easy to use and just takes some good sandpaper (a sanding block helps greatly), and a little patience and you'll have a fine looking roof.
Your call of course whether you want the Labelle roof or MRGS. Enjoy building. I think LaBelle's are fine kits. Curtis Brookshire Pine Level NC
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Climax@...
Take some wooden paint sturing sticks and spray them with spray on glue. Then wrap them in sand paper. They work great and are easily controlled. I have them done in various grit sandpapers. I started on Labelle kits back in the 1960's. The one thing that you should do is make a drilling jig for the wire hand grabs. It keeps them level and properly spaced apart on freight cars. I always finished mine with floquil paints and I put Sierra Scale Models real scale glass on the inside of the windows instead of the plastic. they look so much better. I put full interiors in my cars as well. Used up a lot of Grandt Line Coach seats, put dividers in and even had an RPO and observation car with tables, chairs and a kitchen.
-----Original Message-----
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Scott
Good greif. I have been watching Ebay like a hawk for an Alamosa and it has been available all this time.
Oh well Scott
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