The west wall is not yet complete although progressing.
I managed to distract myself by considering construction of the trusses over the platform. Next thing I knew, I was cutting them out and sticking them together. Not that that's a problem - it all has to come together to get a complete station building.
Each truss is made from three 20-thou plasticard trapeziums, 105 x 25mm. I initially intended to use two trapeziums, but needed the third to give the assembly some stiffness. The smaller strips are added to the diagonals to mimic the construction of the prototype.
Here's one being assembled on a block of steel with magnets to align the laminations. The station requires 9, but I have made 10 so that I can discard the worst.
The steel blocks were an idea I got from reading David Neat's model-making blog (see
https://davidneat.wordpress.com/methods/making-realistic-models/main-construction/). I had mine made by a local engineering company - all surfaces are flat, all corners square, they're heavy enough to stay put, and magnets stick to them. They're probably the most used tool in my modelling tool box.
While I should finish the west wall, I'm now thinking about the skylights - there's probably a better name for them. I think I should make these before cutting the card for the roofs so that it will fit what I make, rather than what I intended to make,
There's one on each side of the roof, each a scale 343 x 25mm comprising 57 panes - larger that a single sheet of plasticard.
My initial thought was to cut each frame in two sections from 10-thou plasticard using my Silhouette cutter, then glue these onto a clear plastic carrier. However, on reflection, I think that I lack the dexterity to apply glue to the frame and apply it to the clear plastic without the glue drying, the frame going on crooked, or getting glue
everywhere, so I'm looking for something more workable.
Options I can see but can't decide between are:
- cut the frame into shorter sections of a few panes each;
- cut the frame as single pane sections
- assemble the frame onto the carrier using conventional plastistrip.
Suggestions would be most welcome.