Wednesday, June 8, 2016

New Industry and new cars on the Kings Port Division

Hello all!

I haven't been blogging much recently but that doesn't mean things haven't been busy on the Kings Port Division.   Still focusing on operations, I'll present the newest "facade" industry that will become part of the virtual ops happening between the Kings Port Division and New York Central Train Layout.

It all started when the Kings Port Division took possession of this UP 60 ft. auto parts car courtesy of the N.Y.C.T.L.  

The gift came with the suggestion it might make a good Kings Port & Western car.   Having custom made a number of my own KP&W freight cars, I greatly appreciated the offer!  The car sat in Williams Yard in its UP livery for a little while until I attended the Twin City Model Railroad Museum Hobby Show and Sale at the State Fairgrounds this Spring.  Among my other purchases, I found an identical UP auto parts car!   Suddenly I saw the possibility of including the gift car as part of our virtual ops.  I decided to create two identical KP&W cars and send one back to the N.Y.C.T.L. for operations and photographic purposes.  


Attempts to use 91% alcohol to remove the UP logos and use the existing orange car body as an easy way to add the car to the KP&W roster proved fruitless.    The logos faded but did not completely disappear.  I wasn't interested in creating a patch job so I used brake fluid to remove all the paint and start from scratch.  It only took a couple of hours for the brake fluid to do the job.


I then spay painted the cars with KP&W orange (Liquitex Professional Spray Paint Cadmium Orange).

Once the paint was dry, I over-sprayed the cars with a gloss medium to prepare them for decals.  Using a combination of commercially available decals for car data and my own custom made KP&W decals (made on Micro-Mark decal paper) the finished cars look like this.

The new cars needed an industry to serve so I "imagineered" ACME Auto Parts.  This is another "off-layout' car routing destination that is represented by a hidden staging track.   It is supposedly located on the Mayfield Branch along with Peerless Appliance and Cavendish Foods which were featured in previous posts.    Just as I did with the other two Mayfield industries, I wanted to create a visual facade backdrop so I could photograph the cars at their set-out locations for the ops scheme.   Here is ACME Auto Parts.


ACME's walls are made from inexpensive plastic lawn sign material that has nice vertically scribed lines that suggest corrugated construction.  The big bold ACME sign is made from a package of cheap alphabet refrigerator magnets.

ACME Auto Parts is now ready to ship to the FORD Plant on the N.Y.C.T.L. and to receive shipments of machine parts.  A new car card box for car routing to ACME has been added to the other Mayfield industries on the layout fascia.


Yet another sign of the economic health of the Kings Port Division during the Penn Central era!   

Thanks for taking a look!

5 comments:

  1. Those UP auto parts cars look really good, especially for Tyco. I keep meaning to find one at a swap meet. Great job on the re-lettering, and I admire your ongoing virtual interchange project!

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  3. Nice job on the cars and the ACME Auto Parts industry! Both came out great! Looking forward to seeing both in action! Well done on both projects!

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    1. Thanks John! Your generous gift of the first car really got the ball rolling on this project!

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  4. John B.: Thanks! I'm impressed by this Tyco offering as well and some one already did the work of adding KayDee body mounted couplers before putting it on the sale table. I got the second car for four dollars...can't beat that! Good luck on the hunt!

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