| A model train set is now under construction! |
Actually I tried to make a model train set once
before but the plan was too small for my model
trains which are HO gauge size ( 16.5 milimeters
gauge). Now I am trying one again with a bigger
space. See, this below is where I am making the
train set now. There used to be a bureau to put
daily stuff like hammers, nails, bolts and nuts
etc etc. I made this bureau but now have to cut
it into 2 to get enough space for a train set.
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November 18th 2006 - Making a layout
#8 :Coloring
Approx surfaces have been made up but they look
kinda ugly lol....... Who has made them? I thought
I had to put something where there's some big
rooms under the tracks and around. Put shredder
dust foam polystyrene, and covered them with
some gauze to coat them with some plaster.

I wonder I didn't need to buy expensive plaster
sheets if I knew this rearrangement were required.
But there's always something you never know
how you can do till you try.
Finally I started coloring my layout - around
tracks. Coat some water bond to glue some color
powder. Some books recommend that we can spray
bond water where we want to color, but that
way does not work to my layout because it's
not like a flat big one. Rails are here and
there, I have to mask all of them by tape in
advance. So, I "paint" some water
bond with a brush then put some color powder
on. Water bond tends to dry quick, so I have
to do that very quick. That is very hard to
do for a slowman.

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November 14th 2006 - Making a layout
#7 : The first corner.
The first corner where Japanese trains pass
through soon after they leave station.

I know moutain houses had better be located
at moutains but I may put it here because the
details around this house are worth showing
to everyone. If I put this one farther deep
in the layout, probably people can not see them.
You can see some green powder at the middle
of this pic above. I put some for trial.
I filmed 2 windows at my house to shut sun lights
because I don't want to explose my layout in
the sun lights. Does this look misterious?
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November 12th 2006 - Making a layout
#5 : crosscountry skiing trail.
As we are located close to the Snowharp the
1998 Nagano winter olympic cross country skiing
trails, I am making a crosscountry skiing hill
in the layout.

It is located around the 3rd corner for the
outside track which is for Japanese model trains.

Crosscountry skiing players are ready! Though
one got upside down before the start... lol
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November 8th 2006 - Making a layout
#4 :up/downhill
Finally time to try making some up/down hills.
As some books say, put some newspaper and tape
them for some plaster sheets.

Kind of annoying if I didn't replace the rails
to do this work as they are not enough tall
from the layout platform.

Books say it easy but it's not!!! Have to learn
how much paper you need to put beforehand etc.
Sometimes need to spray some water to make the
plaster sheets better.
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November 8th 2006 - Making a layout
#4 :Brick walls.

This above is a part on the way of an uphill.
In my first plan, this place was still on the
ground but I needed to make the uphill calmer
because locomotives had hard time to go that
uphill (27/1000) so the uphill had to start
earlier to make it calmer to 21/1000. After
all, platforms would not be flat at this end
lol.....

Walls look like this, but this looks too boring.......

Glued some design paper of brics and pinch them
by clothpins.

Done! Does this look cool?

Tried to take a pic of what we call "Nagashi-dori"
that means to take a picture by focusing something
that is moving.
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November 2nd 2006 - A choice
I have to make
Planning to make a hilly or mountainious scenery
at an edge of the model train layout. Sat down
on a chair for a while then found this view at
my eyes level.

Haven't noticed this view yet. This might be one
of favorite view for railfan. When trains pass
through here, it looks like this. But if I decide
to make a hilly or mountainous scenery, I have
to stop up this view. A cruel choice will have
to be made......... |
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November 1st 2006 - Switching
power pack
The power packs to control trains in my layout
have DC output on their back. But if I use them
for lights of the layout, the lights will be on
always when the power pack is turned on. I would
like to manage it separately and the problem of
capacity , -- usual power packs to control trains
have 1-1.5A for DC output --- I plan to have another
power pack for the lights and got one today.

This one could provide 5A max. Roughly up to 80
small midgetlamps |
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October 27th 2006 - Midgetlamps arrived.
Lamps for layout which I ordered to a shop in
Fukui prefecture has arrived today.

Internet is great stuff, I used to drive around
to get what I need whenever not available nearby
but nowadays I just need to google it with keywords
to find shops sell them then I order some to
them. I get them in a couple of days. Maybe
it's not a perfect way because I can't check
things before I purchase them, but very convenient
especially when I need to save time as I can
get them staying home.

A midgetlamp and its stand (right), small midgetlamp
with vinyl wire. Midgetlapms are for inside
of structures to light them up, small ones are
probably for streets, platforms. They are just
3 mms in diameter!

How to make difference to locate them above?

Tried to check how it looks by connecting one
at a pair of AC10V plugs at the backside of
a powerpack. It's not a strong light, just a
calm one to light things around up like freight
cargs behind. Seldom find this kind of lamps
in Japan but found often in Europe in early
'80s when I traveled around there e.g. in Venezia
and Amsterdam. They were not enough bright to
see my feet though!!
I have to know how to find lamps which don't
work when i have them in a series connection.
If even one didn't work there, all the lamps
there won't work.
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October 26th 2006 - mountain restaurant
Vol.2
As I have not been able to have time to complete
a Faller mountain restaurant for a while, I
took some time for it today. But somehow it
didn't go good to glue some parts. I tried to
pinch them by cramps until tomorrow morning.
Sometimes time solves the problem.
It's getting more and more how it should be.
The black stuff at this end is my glasses case
for my far sighted eyes :(
Flags just needed to be glued good that's why
I put my glasses case there to help it. This
kit needs me a lot patience.
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October 21th 2006 - mountain
restaurant.
Have loved this one since I found it for the first
time on net, had looked for a stock at this shop
and that , finally got one.

Much smaller than expected. |
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October 11th 2006- guards
at the elevated railways.

Getting done little by little. |
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October 7th 2006
As I have made a Kibri mountain house and a
handful Kibri station house structures, this
time I tried Faller public house to see the
difference. It looks like a police office? Could
be Hakuba Hayaokidori railway company main office?
Looks something like "public" building.

I needed 4 hours to complete this one last
night. A bit sleepy now But anyway this one
also need me to glue 4 tiny pieces of parts
less than 1 square cm to make a timny as well
as Kibri one. I hear Faller is also a German
maker, so perhaps this kind of complicated work
is what German people really like and that's
why Kibri and Faller are popular among them.
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October 3rd 2006 Making a layout #2
Glued guards one after another.

But the height of each and every guard is not
the same when you look at them carefully! Not
a big deal but it'll be a hassle if I need to
improve them later, so I decided to do it now.

1mm thick "board". Actually more like wood skin
rather than "board". Have to cut them into 5mms
wide.

This above is how I am adjusting the guard walls'
height, pinching the guards by 2 thin wood skin
from both sides.

This is better looking, I took this pic above
not using a flash.

When I check it from the side, it looks okay.
The opposite guards still looks something uneasy.
I put a clothpin at each and every piece of
the guard to fix them better tonight. Hopefully
they'll be okay by tomorrow morning.
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September 28th 2006
Making a layout #1. Making guardwalls for an
overhead railway in my model train layout. Cut
parts off by a saw and rounded the edges by
a belt sander. Even only that work needed much
time.
Putting some bond by a banboo skewer.

Making walls one after another. The problem
is the overhead railway is a curved one, so
I needed to devide the wall for a curve track
( 30 angles ) into 12 pieces to make them fit.
If it's for a straignt track, I don't need to
do that stuff though.

Locate them at the overhead railway. Those
12 pieces are for 1 curve track which is just
for 30 angles.

When T.E.E Gottard passes, bogies are hidden.

A lot of rooms to spare, so no need to worry
about crashing.
Upgrading trees, they look as if they were
scrub brushes.

Going to coat this powder, it's like some small
sponge made in U.S.A.

Pour some water in some bond and coat some
inbetween leaves. Then put some powder.

Hum...... Looks as if an art that an elementary
school kid did!

That powder is a bit bigget than expected,
don't get in the space good. I got some Tomix
color powder today, tried to use them instead.

The left 2 are by American powder, the right
2 are by Tomix powder. I think Tomix powder
might go good with this work. Closing for today
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September 24th 2006
Passing each other where I replaced the curve
from R=762mms to R=813mms. The outer one on which
Rheingold is passing is R=813mms now, the inner
one is R=711mms. Click
here for a movie clip.

A German former T.E.E train and a Japanese limited
express trains are passing each other - Can never
happen if it's real lol.... |
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September 23th 2006
I thought I wouldn't try to make any structures
for a while yesterday because the station house
needed me much time to complete, but I remember
I got another house together with the station
house. I have to try.....

Praying it's easier than the station house.

Enclosed parts and stuff. Unlike Japanese kits,
they are not wrapped by plastic bags.

This is an explanation sheet. Just pictures,
no descriptions at all. Anyway if it's German,
it doesn't work at all to me because I don't
speak German

For example, in this group some window frames,
doors and equipments for farm works get together.
Each part has its own number to specify themselves,
same parts are shown e.g. parts # x numbers.
Annoying thing is there's no rule how they are
put, clockwise or up and down. So sometimes
it's really hassle to find parts you look for.
Writing down which parts group has what color
to make it easier to find them.

Look, how tiny they are!! A pair of glasses
for far sighted eye and a magnifying glass are
necessary.

Pinching a 1mm x 2mms part by a pair of tweezers.
Have to be careful not to lose it. It's a hook
to hang a pole to fix window shutters.

Looks like the one at the upper right.

Done for today, it took 3 hours and a half.
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September 22th 2006
Station house almost completed - It has taken
so much time for me to complete this station
house but now it's finally almost completed.
Why "almost" ? Because I have lost
some tiny parts when I cut them out lol......
can't find them any more, that's why.

This is maybe a warehouse. This kit includes
even drainpipes.....

As there is a handwash stand close to the door,
I made it a toilet beyond the door. A telephone
box is also along the sidewall. I needed to
glue 3 gray tiny boards with clear boards to
make the box as usual with this kit, arrggghhhhhh
!!!!!!

Platform side of the warehouse. A seal full
of posters, pictures is included in this kit,
so you can cut anything you like out to put
them there. Easy and looks good.

Warehouse side of the main station house. Yellow
and white train schedule. In Germany, arrival
train schedule and departure train schedule
were painted differently, can't remember which
was which though.......
Maybe a luggage office house connected to the
main station house. Perhaps it looks interesting
if I put some cow dolls at the right which looks
like a jail !

Front view of the "jail". This could be also
a toilet.

Main station house opposite side of the tracks.
A restaurant symbol is at the post. I put a
restaurant at the first floor (Ground floor
in English way) and accommodation at the upstairs.

Entire view. Yay! finally done, sigh..........
Reconsideration : #1 You had better try to make
it at a stroke not having some break e.g. 1
week or so. #2 If you already have far sighted
eyes due to your age, you'd better make this
kind of stuff somewhere with a 1 strong color
carpet, not a carpet with embroidery. If you
make this kind of stuff on a carpet with embroidery,
you never find what you drop off there lol........
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September 21th 2006
After a long interval, I started making a station
house for my model train layout again after
a long interval. Haven't tried it for a couple
of months because it causes sore shoulder lol......
Just putting a pair of handrails at a stairs
for a bar at the 1st floor ( Ground floor in
British way) of this station house. Handrails
are really thin and tiny, I need to be really
careful not to break them. The left entrance
reach the platform.

This Kibri kit really needs me to do very tiny
and complicated work . I have to glue 3 tiny
board to make this one!!! I prefer them to enclose
a completed one instead of 3 tiny boards for
it. If I tried to make this one by an adhesive,
it's more like hell rather than it needs much
time, so I decided to use something else.

A quick drying glue. As you know, it's hard
for us to get stuff apart once they are glued
by this. Probably risky for me but anyway I
have been frustrated a bit with this kit so
I would take the risk if I failed to glue something
bad with this quick drying glue because I thought
I can not stay with usual adhesive any more
for this Kibri kit.

A cart for passengers to carry their heavy baggages.
What a detail ! But you don't need to be impressed,
once you try to make this one, you will be bothered
a lot because when you try to glue one, something
else gets apart lol..... Really annoying!

Look at the inside of the red circles above.
Do you see a tiny edge in each circle? You need
to cut each and every part off from the kit
to glue them good. Otherwise those tiny edges
cause bad connection. It's a micro world of
less than 1mm!

This garbage cart is a rare case with this Kibri
kit. Just a box and a cover, I like that way!!!!!!
Not complicated, just need to cut them out from
others. Wish I could ask Kibri to provide everything
that way in German lol... (Kibri is a German
maker)
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September 19th 2006
As I got a dozen of R813mms curve, I started processing
them cutting some floor boards for them but.....
the sander (right one in the pic below ) didn't
work!!!!!!!!!
It often happens when I want to use something
after a long interval which is really disappointed.
I tried another sander below, but it doesn't
work as good as the one above. It's totally
different stuff for different purpose.

I took the broken one above to a DIY center
neaby, fortunately I met a sales guy of the
maker happened to be there, but he told me that
one was enough old, parts might not be found
any more. He explained a new one but it looks
like a bit bulkier and heavier, not convenient
to me. I just have to pray parts are still available.
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September 17th 2006
A box of R=813mms curve tracks was delivered,
have to improve my model train layout with them.
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July 19th 2006
I am not good at mechanic stuff, so when locomotives
have difficulties to run, I have really hard time
to deal with it.

Anyway, I have to try to fix it. This time the
gears in a queue around my finger can be moved
by my fingers both directions. Usually they are
not easy to turn when they work correctly. I think
they don't gear with others good. And the one
pointed by the grey double line arrow is usually
located just beside the arch pointed by the yellow
arrow. I have to move the gear to the direction
pointed by the red arrow. Probably something which
works to connect them might be missed. Unscrew
some to fix the problem unlocking the motor.......arghhh!!
sigh........ not good at doing this!!!

Do you see a small hole at the gear pointed by
a toothpick? It seemed a screw might have been
missed here, but when I looked at it carefully
I found a very tiny groove in it. It might be
a screw without a bulge head. I tried to screw
it clockwise, then it worked good to fix the problem,
yay!
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June 20th 2006
Adjusting a steep uphill carmer. I designed my
layout having a steepest uphill being a 27 per
mil (27vertical for 1000 horizontal), but it seems
a bit too steep for a F-class locomotives to pull
a 6 brass-coarches train so I tried to make it
a bit carmer.

The lowest wood is the original girder, I needed
to add some thin boards to make the uphill carmer.
The more you get apart from the original point,
the more you need to put some. After all the uphill
may begin at the station area.

Focusing the rail, cross ties and ballast. I think
it looks gorgeous! What do you think? I got an
advice that Mach LPS oil works good for coarches
to go uphill easier so I ordered some today. |
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June 12th 2006
View from a coarch - The other day I put a clip
"View from a control room", so now I put "View
from a coarch". Click this pic below.

It looks as if you were a passenger! Have fun......... |
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June 11th 2006
An old power pack which drives 1 train. You turn
it clockwise when you drive a train, do it anticlockwise
when you stop it.

But it's difficult to drive a train as it runs
because the points of contact for electricity
is every other copper round one you see in the
middle. |
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June 9th 2006
View from a control room. Tried to take a movie
a couple of weeks back. Click this image below
to see a clip.

Just wondered how it looks. |
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June 8th 2006
Still playing to make this station house! Never
reach the goal. Perhaps long, long distances
to there.

I think maybe someday I will be happy to complete
it ( I hope.)
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| May 17th 2006 |
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| At the Golden week, I could
not have time to go ahead because it's one
of our busy time with customers. Additional,
with a bit of lacking of attention after
the Golden week, I got injured at the layout
and exactly could not do anything. But here's
the Gottardo train also passes the switches. |
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| May 2nd 2006 |
| JNR
165 series express train. |
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| April 29th 2006 |
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| As the layout has some switches,
I have to make a switch control board.To
do this, draw the lines as they are and
make holes to set control switches. |
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| Putting control switches at
the holes. |
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| And connecting wires to each
and every electric switch machines, this
is terribly tiresome. |
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| April 20th 2006 |
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| Bought some "trees". Looks as if scrubbing
brushes. They are roughly 12cms tall. You can
process them however you like. Cut some or spray
your favorite color etc. |
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| The station looks like this. I have to make
platforms. Does that station house look good? |
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| Switches at the north of the station. |
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| Curves at the north side of the station. Just
where the trial loop line was on March 19th 2006.
I need to cut all the rail floor out, put rails
and balast there for each and every rail. Too
much time needed. Radius 660mms, 711mms, 711mms,
762mms (Left to right) |
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| April 16th 2006 |
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| Been making rails for a while as it has made
me sick to make the station house. Sigh again
tiny stuff. All less than 1cm! What do you think
they are? |
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The answer is a chimney. Do they love to make
this?
This is a really tiny chimney why don't they enclose
just
a chimney in the kit instead of 4 pieces of tiny
parts
which are hard to fix by bond? Maybe German people
love to do this difficult thing that's why Kibri
offers this kind of kits. |
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| Getting done. You can see curtains at the windows
at upstairs. Actually they enclose a lot kind
of pictures for it, I just need to cut some out
to put one at each and every window by glue. |
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| If I put lights inside, it looks like this.
A bit hard to see, but the lights come out from
the windows upstairs as well. You can see a clock
at the right of this picture. What a details!
Needed to cut it out which is less than 1cm in
diameter by a cutter!!!! |
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| April 11th 2006 |
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| This needs bloody tons of time to make this
kit......What do you think this is? |
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| The answer is here. |
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| April 5th 2006 |
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| Went to Tokyo the other day to purchase
some structures for my layout. This above is a
station house of Kibri. I think Kibri is a German
company. |
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| Very tiny parts here and there, so I really
need to be careful not to lose any. Have to stop
breathing at that moment, if I cough bad then
I have to look for the parts with my far sighted
eyes which is terrible. Aarrghhhhhh!!! getting
more sore shoulders :( |
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| Parts are enclosed in the box like
this. Very different from Japanese kit. Usually
Japanese kits enclose all parts for a certain
stuff e.g. roof, walls etc in "a" plastic
bag so we just need to find each and every part
in the bag. But with this kibri, things go different.
Parts for an exact stuff are not connected together
with other parts for the exact stuff. So I need
to find each and every part SOMEWHERE!!! This
is really annoying. As you see, all the parts
are named like U437, so anyway you can find it
somewhen...... Additionally there's no order how
to connect parts, not like U435 - U 436 - U437
in clockwise. Just like U437 - U442 - U 434!!!
So i sorted all the blocks in number order and
refer the guidence sheets. |
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Guidence sheets. For example, Japanese kits
usually enclose those U642, U624, U565, U556,
U564 in a plastic bag, so easier to find them
all. But with this Kibri, you need find each
and every part in some blocks like the upper
picture.
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| I really don't understand what for this tiny
wall needs to be there......... It's on the way
from outside for inside of this station house.
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| April 2nd 2006 |
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Now I need more rails, so have to make a lot.
This above is a left switch on a switch floor.
I need to put a floor under each and every track. |
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| Need to trace the outline of each rail to fit
it on the floor. |
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| Put some bond on the floor. If it's a switch
like this case, have to avoid the sensitive part
for the switch to work. |
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| Put the rail on the floor. |
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| Fix it by small nails - Very small and thin! |
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| Hammer the nail's head by the tail of this special
tiny instrument. |
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| By these small nails, rails are fixed at the
floor. |
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| Spread some balast on the floor on which bond
is put. |
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| Level the balast by a paintbrush. |
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| March 19th 2006 |
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A 9 mm thick board and a 5.5 mm thick board were
put on the base. Then now a trial track is set.
JNR EC181 series Limited express train "Azusa"
is passing. |
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| Mammoth electric loco JNR/JR EF66
is pulling 20 series sleeping coarches |
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| A diesel loco JNR DD54 is passing
pulling 20 series overnight limited express coarches. |
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| T.E.E ( Trans Europe Express ) Gottardo
is passing. |
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| JNR/JR DC82 series limited express
train |
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| March 15th 2006 |
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| The train set table is about 5.3 meters x 2.4
meters (parcially 1.8 meters) big. The bigger
is the better but at the moment, this is the biggest
I could have. |
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| March 10th 2006 |
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| The upper part of the bureau is now under the
train set table. March 10th 2006. |
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March
6th 2006
Everything inside is now removed. Humm how I can
cut this? The diagonal boards which i put to make
it stronger bother me a lot when I cut it.
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| March 5th 2006 |
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| This bureau is roughly 2.5 meters tall. |
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