 
          
            -
          
        
        
          
            STEP 10: The Receiving Ramp
          
        
        
          
            Continued ...
          
        
        
          Begin by staining a number of pieces of scale 12” x 12”, 4” x
        
        
          10”, 2” x 6” and 4” x 4” with the light grey color. Once the light
        
        
          grey is dry, I put some of the black stain in a small container,
        
        
          dilute it little bit more with water, and then lightly brush it
        
        
          onto the wood pieces. The objective is to get a weathered grey
        
        
          color similar to that in the photo of Tipple 52.
        
        
          Next, print the bent drawing shown in Drawing 5 and tape it
        
        
          to a flat surface. Use this template to construct all of the bents
        
        
          supporting the ramp. Cut pieces of the 12” x 12” to match the
        
        
          top timber and the posts using the template. The photo here
        
        
          (31) shows the bent template laid out along with the cap and
        
        
          the two end posts glued in place.
        
        
          I use the small piece of cardboard and the pin in the photo
        
        
          (31) to apply small amounts of white glue to the ends of the
        
        
          posts. The photo (31) also shows the profile of the ramp that I
        
        
          drew in order to determine the height of the successive bents.
        
        
          Tom Patterson got his start in model
        
        
          railroading with a Lionel train set at
        
        
          Christmas back in the ‘60s. That train
        
        
          set eventually became part of his first
        
        
          layout. Tom reentered model rail-
        
        
          roading in the late ‘70s and has been
        
        
          working on his current layout, the HO
        
        
          scale Chesapeake, Wheeling and Erie
        
        
          Railroad, a free-lanced coal hauler set in West Virginia, for
        
        
          almost 20 years.
        
        
          Tom and his wife have two grown children and live in
        
        
          Cincinnati, Ohio. They enjoy hiking, biking, reading and
        
        
          spending time with their family, which includes two res-
        
        
          cue mutts and a large number of salt water fish.