STEP 1A: Car Sides 75000 – 75999 Series
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and made a small mark with the X-Acto knife. With the
knife blade in the mark, I run the T-square up to the blade
and made a single pass with the X-Acto knife across the top
of the car. I find that I have much more accurate measure-
ments this way than with a pencil. Since I did both sides in
a single pass, I know they will be the same height.
I measured in 39’-8” from each edge of the styrene to
mark the length of the car side. I determined this length
by measuring a Sunshine Models kit that somehow never
was put together. I measured in from each edge so that I
would be working from the factory edge. This left a small
gap in the center of the styrene that I drew an “X” in so I
knew it was waste.
After the limits of the sides were marked I located the
center of the car side. From this point I measured 3’ on
each side and drew in vertical lines. These lines mark the
door opening and again an “X” was drawn in the door area
marking the areas to be discarded. I find that if I do this
it creates a visual effect that eliminates confusion as to
where the various parts of the car are.
Next I laid out the side panels. There are 5 panels on each
side of the door, and each panel is 3’-4” wide. Trying to
measure out each panel one after the other is a recipe for
disaster. I turned to an old trick that draftsmen used (yes I
took drafting classes in high school, long before computers
and CAD programs became available).
I used my 3-sided engineers scale and found a measure-
ment that easily divided the side into 5 equal parts, but
was longer than the length of the area to be divided. Hold-
ing one end of the scale at the door mark, I rotated the
scale untill the other desired mark was at the edge of the