 
          Coal Cars - 11
        
        
          
            The Mt. Coffin & Columbia River
          
        
        
          
            Continued ...
          
        
        
          I throw the basswood strips in there to stain them when I build
        
        
          bridges or am making us some replacement ties. I dip a brush in
        
        
          there and paint the sides of cars and styrene buildings to weather
        
        
          them (with various levels of success). I dip a paper towel in there and
        
        
          blot the cedar shingles to color them before applying to the roof.
        
        
          I've had the same jar for at least two years. When it starts to get low,
        
        
          or weak, I throw in more alcohol and whatever else I think it needs.
        
        
          Usually more India ink and some kind of brown color. It's a little like
        
        
          Pappy's moonshine: not exactly sure what the recipe is, but when
        
        
          you start to go blind it's done!
        
        
          On a whim I realized I could rest the camera on the water to get the
        
        
          shot in figure 16.
        
        
          I haven't been able to find any NBW details in N-scale, so I use Grandt
        
        
          Line HO-scale 1-1/2" NBW for the small ones and Grandt Line O-scale
        
        
          1" square NBW for the larger square ones. It pays to poke around in
        
        
          other scales' bins! I used the combination to detail the bridge, the
        
        
          coal unloading dock and the 20-ton coal cars from RLW.
        
        
          In all cases I paint the heads first (usually grimy black), use a knife
        
        
          to cut off the heads and then apply to the structure with the same
        
        
          wood glue I use to build the building.
        
        
          The HO bolt heads are so small and round that I lose 10%-25% just by
        
        
          having them fly out of the tweezers as I go to apply them.
        
        
          I just wish there were realistic N-scale rivets out there! (Archer now
        
        
          makes N scale rivets, just Google "Archer N scale rivets". - MRH)
        
        
          This layout has been definitely worth it in terms of skill-building. I've
        
        
          learned:
        
        
          Handlaying your own turnouts is both extremely satisfying
        
        
          as well as layout-design liberating: no longer are you at the
        
        
          mercy of manufacturers’ frog sizes or turnout lengths!
        
        
        
        
          MRH-Mar 2013