Bird Brain Model Rails
Bird Brain Model Rails
  • Видео 60
  • Просмотров 77 975
Landscaping the Northeast section (N Scale) Part 1
First stage of painting the colors into the landscape. This will be a series of videos as we move forward with multiple colors and ground effects.
Don't forget to hit the like and subscribe buttons if you haven't already.
God Bless and have a great day.
Просмотров: 250

Видео

Testing Radius
Просмотров 616Год назад
Testing the radius on my N Scale using a Micro Trains Auto Rack. I personally, am impressed with the results. Don't forget to hit the like and subscribe buttons. God Bless and have a great day.
Installing trees and foliage to the layout.
Просмотров 1772 года назад
In this episode I'm installing trees and shrubbery to a lake scene on my N scale layout. Please don't forget to hit the like and subscribe buttons. God bless and have a great day.
Track Layout. Incline VS Flat.
Просмотров 2782 года назад
Laying flat track VS landscaping a grade or incline. What you need to consider. Inclines or grades are beautiful on any layout. However, you will need additional locomotives in order to pull your freight. Don't forget to hit the like and subscribe buttons. God bless and have a great day.
Arduino Controlled Reversing Trolley
Просмотров 4532 года назад
Today we are working on our reversing Trolley controlled by an Arduino system. Huge shout-out to Jack Regan from Hobby Smart LLC for his help and guidance while I built this section of the layout. The link to his site for many different Arduino controller is... ( smarthobbyllc ) Don't forget to hit the like and subscribe buttons. Have a great day and God Bless
Foam Cutting Tools
Просмотров 1452 года назад
Here is an idea I came up with for a custom made foam cutter using materials I had laying around the shop. Don't forget to hit the like and subscribe buttons. Have a great day and God Bless.
View from Chair
Просмотров 1212 года назад
Eye level view. I hope you enjoy this video as much as I enjoyed creating the process. Don't forget to hit the like and subscribe buttons. Have a great day and God Bless.
N Scale Mainline Progress
Просмотров 1002 года назад
Finally got both main lines setup the way I want. There is still lots to do but the layout is coming along nicely. Please excuse the clutter. Don't forget to hit the like and subscribe buttons. Have a great day and God Bless.
Multiple DC Loco's part 2
Просмотров 552 года назад
Running multiple DC loco's on the same rail at the same time. Part 2.
Multiple DC Loco's part 1
Просмотров 642 года назад
Running multiple DC Loco's on the same rail at the same time.
Soldering pitfalls part 2
Просмотров 1032 года назад
Part 2 of our solder repair.
Soldering pitfalls part 1
Просмотров 622 года назад
Solving issues with a bad solder joint. Be sure to watch part 2.
Incline pitfalls
Просмотров 1782 года назад
Measuring your length of your incline. It doesn't matter what scale you are working with. You need to set your incline to the path of least resistance. Please don't forget to hit the like and subscribe buttons. God Bless and Thank You.
Landscaping with Plaster Cloth
Просмотров 5362 года назад
This 21 minute video was created for anyone new to landscaping and everybody that likes to have options on how to build on their layouts.
Play Day
Просмотров 722 года назад
Sometimes, you just have to run-em. Clips were shot by a good friend of mine. We were enjoying watching them run.
Building and Weathering a Bridge
Просмотров 3012 года назад
Building and Weathering a Bridge
Intermodal 1
Просмотров 1312 года назад
Intermodal 1
Installing Feeder Wires (Why We do it).
Просмотров 1 тыс.3 года назад
Installing Feeder Wires (Why We do it).
Franklin Mint PS4 Southern Crescent Limited
Просмотров 4563 года назад
Franklin Mint PS4 Southern Crescent Limited
Testing Crossing Signals
Просмотров 1463 года назад
Testing Crossing Signals
Static Grass Part 2
Просмотров 2513 года назад
Static Grass Part 2
Static Grass Part 1
Просмотров 1223 года назад
Static Grass Part 1
Updates to Swing Gate, Farm and Round House.
Просмотров 1323 года назад
Updates to Swing Gate, Farm and Round House.
Static Display Part 3
Просмотров 893 года назад
Static Display Part 3
Landscaping Tips #1
Просмотров 3913 года назад
Landscaping Tips #1
Creating tunnels on the layout.
Просмотров 2783 года назад
Creating tunnels on the layout.
Landscaping with Plaster Cloth - Part 1
Просмотров 6843 года назад
Landscaping with Plaster Cloth - Part 1
Smoke unit no no's
Просмотров 3673 года назад
Smoke unit no no's
Weathering Buildings
Просмотров 2903 года назад
Weathering Buildings
Building a Drug Store
Просмотров 1613 года назад
Building a Drug Store

Комментарии

  • @timothyahernRoxyCat
    @timothyahernRoxyCat Месяц назад

    That was really handy and clear. Thank you.

  • @mgamga9476
    @mgamga9476 Месяц назад

    All that but never mentioned any of your radius.

  • @Lorne-u2h
    @Lorne-u2h 2 месяца назад

    Back in '79 we'd paint the bottom of glass and mount it clear side up. Most ripple effects underneath.

  • @steveashcraft718
    @steveashcraft718 3 месяца назад

    Code 100 you can run anything!

  • @steveashcraft718
    @steveashcraft718 4 месяца назад

    Yes, code 100 is what I'll be using. Runs everything.

  • @amandahugankiss4110
    @amandahugankiss4110 4 месяца назад

    now i want a cigarette. great video!

  • @brianmounts3200
    @brianmounts3200 6 месяцев назад

    been running ho trains since 1973 and this is the best explanation I have seen. great video.

    • @birdbrainmodelrails9701
      @birdbrainmodelrails9701 6 месяцев назад

      If you haven't already. Please like and subscribe to my channel. Thanks. Glad you enjoyed it.

  • @deansimons3194
    @deansimons3194 8 месяцев назад

    You must be a newbie nobody uses life like Rao or Atlas that's all junk try switching over to Pico or micro-engineering knucklehead

  • @deansimons3194
    @deansimons3194 8 месяцев назад

    Hey where are Americans speaking Imperial not millimeters unless you're speaking with Europe this is America Imperial you knucklehead

  • @lucgagnon5241
    @lucgagnon5241 9 месяцев назад

    There is not only a big difference between code 83 and code 100. There's a huge one between manufacturers. If you're a serious modeler, code 83 should be the very start. Code 100 looks too big and it's way out of scale. Micro engineering is the BEST looking track in the business. PECO streamline is a very nice one too. Atlas (tracks and turnouts) should be avoid at any cost. It's a cheap track that looks awful to my point of view. And their turnouts are trouble makers. When you want something nice... you need to pay more. Then you get the best of your layout. Track is the basic of model railroading. There should never be compromises when it comes to it.

  • @christophergamble7935
    @christophergamble7935 9 месяцев назад

    Brave to do the painting with the loco running around!

  • @williambutler9609
    @williambutler9609 10 месяцев назад

    I am using code 83 and code 70 on my layout. I would have used all code 70 if the turnouts that I needed were available in code 70. They also are not available in code 100. Only code 83. All my trains have NMRA RP25 profile wheels. A recommended practice adopted by the NMRA in 1961. RP25 wheels will work on rail as small as code 40 without problems as long as the trackwork is good. Code 70 is the equivalent of mainline track during the steam era, while code 8d is the equivalent of present-day mainline track except in a few areas of very high traffic.

  • @michaeljoyce4555
    @michaeljoyce4555 10 месяцев назад

    Excellent job...just remove the ashtray...smoke residue tarnishes brass..again thanks

  • @phillipg1588
    @phillipg1588 11 месяцев назад

    I'm building an N scale layout using Peco code 55 flex track and it's almost IMPOSSIBLE to join track using the rail joiners. I have had enough of skinned fingers and bent joiners trying to do the job, so my solution will be to solder the rails without any joiners. I also use a pen style flex pen - no messy flux paste - good to go. 👍

  • @MaxBoogieOverdrive
    @MaxBoogieOverdrive 11 месяцев назад

    Thank you for the very clear explanation….. tons of searching for the Answer to this very question, and no one seems to be able to give a simple explanation. Thank you !

  • @Mikesuch1
    @Mikesuch1 11 месяцев назад

    Model looks great! What color did you use for the outside bricks?

  • @4speed3pedals
    @4speed3pedals 11 месяцев назад

    I do not trust digital calipers or micrometers. I prefer a dial or a graduated gauge that has to be read. You can see how much time is wasted zeroing the scale. Shars sells nice quality calipers at a very reasonable price and even at the upper end of their inaccuracy standards, I feel I am getting good readings, especially when comparing to a high quality micrometer. No batteries to replace, just make sure it is on zero or adjust the dial if not and start measuring. I always clean the mating surfaces of the jaws with a clean finger before setting the dial to zero.

  • @johnfunk6343
    @johnfunk6343 Год назад

    That’s exactly how I want to set up mine in my living room

  • @CharlieDiamond-em5so
    @CharlieDiamond-em5so Год назад

    Glueing between the corrugation, ruins the plowed and planted look. Might as well glue them directly to your layout! However, the use of the cardboard box pieces, is a great Idea. I’ve actually used it myself. Here’s how to get a better look... Get yourself a shovel full of dirt. Get out the Rocks, roots, etc., and set them aside. Screen it throughly with a common kitchen screen. Don’t force it thru the mesh. You can get 3 textures from this. You’re Using just the finest dirt for this. You can change the color by adding light or dark tile grout, if you Don’t feel it looks right when wet. (the dirt takes on a wet look when it absorbs the Glue.) in a pinch, using old dry potting soil, or even those little expanding, seed starting plugs, work. Cover the corrugated surface with glue. Use a brush to spread it, and don’t let it puddle in the furrows. Keep it spread evenly. Then using the same screen you did earlier, sift out dirt over the whole piece of cardboard, making sure to keep the furrowed shape, by occasionally, gently brushing the dirt from them. (The dirt will absorb the glue, and stick to itself, leaving you with a hard, flat piece of dirt, otherwise.) Give it roughly a 1/2 hour or so to set up. Then flip it over, give it a tap. Maybe a little shimmy. Then see if you have any bare spots. If so, brush a bit of Glue on those spots, and put some dirt on that. Now, I usually wait a half hour for the new glue to set up, but you could save the time by just, at this point, sift the dirt over the entire piece, til it is all filled in and flat. Now put a piece of Wax paper over it, and set a weight, like a book, on it and leave it to completely dry.( the Book keeps it flat, while all the extra dirt, keeps it from crushing flat.) At this point, I would personally, remove each Stalk from the strip, and prepare it to plant it all individually. But that’s me. Using the entire strip, I’d coat the top and sides of the base strip with glue, and sprinkle some of the fine sifted dirt over it, so it blends in. Also, give every Third stalk, a quarter or Half turn. Alternate between clockwise, and Counter clockwise twists, and run them in a series. By that I mean, in a strip of 20, with every third one turned, you’ll have 2 left in that row. Which means on the next strip, you turn the first stalk, and every 3rd stalk after, and so on. Once all is dry. Shake off the loose dirt. Put a stripe of glue on the bottom of the Corn Row, and set it onto the rise. Don’t be afraid to use a little pressure, or the “Glue ooze”. Once you’ve gotten your rows planted, use a skewer or paint brush to spread the glue ooze evenly down the edges of the strip where it touches the rise. Then sift some more of the dirt over it. Some times, Angling the corn field, so the dirt hits flat on the rising sides, helps here to round out the transition between the curved surface, and the flat sided strip. For added realism, put in a little ground cover here and there. A small tuft of drying Grass, some kind of clover like greenery in the furrows, or up the sides here and there, within the rows. Corn rarely grows alone, wether in a garden, or a 40 Acre field. 👍🏼😁

  • @BsrlinMAZ
    @BsrlinMAZ Год назад

    This is great advice! I see so many people showing store-bought stuff in their 'how-to' guides, and it is such a waste of money. I often think to myself that those people are showing me that they have more money than sense, ha-ha. I think old-school 'chicken-wire' could be used for areas that need more strength/support, but I am brand new to all this, so have no experience to base that statement on. Thank you for this guide. 👍

  • @BsrlinMAZ
    @BsrlinMAZ Год назад

    Thank you for this sir. I retired last year, and have wanted to get into model railroading since I was a young boy...so recently I started looking through guides, watching a lot of youtube videos, etc., and this is the first time I have seen anyone mention the need for the feeder wires. As a beginner in this hobby I probably would have been banging my head against a wall trying to understand why my locomotives were slowing as they got further away from the main power. So thank you again. I've liked and subscribed to your channel, and will be looking through all your guides, as I think you have a lot of information available here.

  • @wedelacresdepottrains9060
    @wedelacresdepottrains9060 Год назад

    Instead of leaving the stalks "flat" , grab the base of each stalk about a quarter of an inch up and give it a quarter twist. Go up another quarter and give another quarter twist . Continue same process for each stalk ! Gives it a realistic look then !

  • @TomasTrains7
    @TomasTrains7 Год назад

    Thanks for the tutorial : )

  • @anthonythompson4718
    @anthonythompson4718 Год назад

    Thank I well explained I’m a newbie and that was very helpful.

  • @WWIIREBEL
    @WWIIREBEL Год назад

    I just stick to code 100....it's universal for all HO scale trains.

  • @thetwogardens6048
    @thetwogardens6048 Год назад

    Gee, all this stuff is a mind job for newbies like me !

  • @jrasche
    @jrasche Год назад

    Why are you using brass turnouts? is there a reason for that, or all you had at the time scenario? not trying to be rude or smart, generally curious as I am learning all of this to start my own layout. thanks!

    • @birdbrainmodelrails9701
      @birdbrainmodelrails9701 Год назад

      I am using Atlas track.

    • @jrasche
      @jrasche Год назад

      I’m sorry I’m not following. You use nickel for the main track and brass for the turnouts and I’m just wondering why that is? Conductivity reasons??

  • @eligebrown8998
    @eligebrown8998 Год назад

    Thank you sir gor thos video. I bought a layout book to get dome ideas and it mentioned code 83 and 100. Im going code 100 all the way. Ive always had a few HO trains but im finly able to start my first layout.

  • @MrBsHiawathalandRails
    @MrBsHiawathalandRails 2 года назад

    Nice talk, important to know for sure!

  • @MrBsHiawathalandRails
    @MrBsHiawathalandRails 2 года назад

    Looks great!

  • @gntlmn1956
    @gntlmn1956 2 года назад

    Inclines are NOT rate by DEGREES...... they are rated by PERCENT Grade. There is a major difference between DEGREES and PERCENT of Grade.

  • @mysticrailroad
    @mysticrailroad 2 года назад

    nice work! foliage makes a big difference :)

  • @davidf1712
    @davidf1712 2 года назад

    there is something wrong with your video, it lags really bad, i have to wait every 10 seconds for it to continue, No other videos from other channels do this. What gives?

  • @franzh2403
    @franzh2403 2 года назад

    Hello, you have a wonderful Loco! 👍

  • @abram8325
    @abram8325 2 года назад

    𝘱𝘳𝘰𝘮𝘰𝘴𝘮

  • @a.j.grabbe9295
    @a.j.grabbe9295 2 года назад

    what did you use to put the corn stalks in line prior to gluing them in together?

  • @jyajboots
    @jyajboots 2 года назад

    Off camera and part 2 is not part 2!

  • @Mr._Darby
    @Mr._Darby 2 года назад

    Great idea

  • @kevindunlap5525
    @kevindunlap5525 2 года назад

    I've hoarded almost every cardboard box and grocery box for several years now. You get a really good feel for how much recycling we really go through. My choices blow away the model store, and everything is custom made and unique. I'm always surprised at how I find just the exact piece of cardboard that I need.

  • @ndbowen6435
    @ndbowen6435 2 года назад

    “Thanks” Uncle Pat🥰… we truly had a wonderful time viewing all the trains and designs you have so diligently worked on. Keep posting. Very interesting.

  • @santhosh5796
    @santhosh5796 2 года назад

    What is the thickness or width of the rail head portion of code 83 and code 100 tracks?

    • @Greatdome99
      @Greatdome99 2 года назад

      Doesn't matter. "Gauge" is the distance from the inner surface of rails to each other.

  • @georgewoodget271
    @georgewoodget271 2 года назад

    I appreciate you sharing this information. Thank's

  • @brucewingate9708
    @brucewingate9708 2 года назад

    thank you for the clear explanations without all the distractions

  • @rainman7992
    @rainman7992 2 года назад

    dis was wery educational...thanks. Not sure why you want brass turnouts...I'm with you on flex track...I hate that with a passion. I stick with cookie cutter track layouts so I NEVER have a need for the flex.

  • @Crookedriverandeasternrr
    @Crookedriverandeasternrr 3 года назад

    Very nice. Happy new year

  • @MrBsHiawathalandRails
    @MrBsHiawathalandRails 3 года назад

    Nice run. Happy New Years!

  • @p.a.valentine
    @p.a.valentine 3 года назад

    High rail O scale?

  • @MrBsHiawathalandRails
    @MrBsHiawathalandRails 3 года назад

    Good point! My layout is a U of 15' x 3'6" and I have 20 feeders on my double main line and more in my yard.

  • @TheGreatBlumpkin
    @TheGreatBlumpkin 3 года назад

    You could use this technique and make an infinity mirror endless corn field scene

  • @michaelevan9184
    @michaelevan9184 3 года назад

    Very nice explanation.....thanks!