
Wayne Wesolowski
2021Building Model Railroad Wood Structures
Wayne Wesolowski
INTRODUCTION - 00:00 - Wayne becomes HO scale and visits Marengo. FREIGHT YARD - 02:40 - Wood is not limited to buildings. CARPENTER SHOP - 03:10 - Scaled-down carpentry. KIT EVALUATION - 07:40 - Wayne tells you how to select a wood kit. WORK AREA - 10:30 - A good work area and set of tools are what you need. WOOD PREPARATION - 14:00 - Smooth, rough, new, worn, painted... decisions to make. GLUING - 22:00 - Globs of glue are not the answer. SUB-ASSEMBLIES - 27:00 - Wane make it all fit together. ROOFS - 31:00 - Wayne's secret for squaring up a roof and hiding mistakes. FINAL DETAILS - 37:20 - The station kit comes to life. SUPER-DETAILED KITS - 38:30 - A prize-winner with lots of details and scenes within scenes. CLOSING - 39:35
Building Model Railroad Wood Structures
The Basics of Model Railroading with Wayne Wesolowski
Wayne Wesolowski
Wayne dreams he can build a small layout with a minimum of expenses and space. He gets some helpful advice from his "Good Sense." There's so much to consider... time period, type of traffic, and scale. Wayne selects a 1950's-era branch line in HO. The Atlas track components cause the size to be 4'6" x 3'8". L-girder is perfect for the Marengo, Milwaukee & Northern. We need 1x1s, 1x2s, 1x3s, 1x4s, 2x2s, and a sheet of 1/2" plywood. "Keep it simple" is good advice for a first-time layout. However, by dividing the layout into 4 blocks we can run two trains. Polyfoam is the base for the scenic landforms. Wayne adds laytex paint, ground foam, and rocks. Artist's acrylic Gloss Medium forms the lake. All the structures get some weathering. Wayne lists some of the problem areas - couplers, track, and trucks - and shows you how to make them work properly. Locomotives can also be a source of trouble if you fail to maintain them.
The Basics of Model Railroading with Wayne Wesolowski