Sven J Posted July 23, 2023 Posted July 23, 2023 (edited) Dear all, For my next steam locomotive (almost finished - coming soon!) I designed a little passenger car based on this one belonging to the "Hespertalbahn" museum railway in Essen, Germany. Before being acquired and restored by the museum railway, the prototype was used for transporting workers to the "Pörtingssiepen" colliery, also in Essen. It has 50 seats in 2+3 configuration, no brakes and a maximum permitted speed of 65 km/h. And here's the model: The roof is not detachable this time, for it is an integral structural part and helps to brace the SNOTted sides. Thus, a render image of the interior has to suffice. I hope you like it - comments and criticism are welcome. Thanks for stopping by! Kind regards, Sven Edited July 23, 2023 by Sven J Quote
Kivi Posted July 23, 2023 Posted July 23, 2023 I definitely like it, especially the details on undercarriage and both ends of the car. Quote
Feuer Zug Posted July 24, 2023 Posted July 24, 2023 Well done. Plenty of details on this passenger wagon. I like the work you did on the ends with the buffers and verandas. Quote
LEGO Train 12 Volts Posted July 24, 2023 Posted July 24, 2023 Hello Sven ...as usual to a new post corresponds a new work of art! This wagon is no exception to the rule! The dark green color is one of my favourites, even though terribly expensive (unless you order some bulk from bluebrixx) I like the bumpers and I have a question: why one is flat and the other is convex... maybe to work better when they are mated? Quote
Sven J Posted July 24, 2023 Author Posted July 24, 2023 (edited) Thank you very much for your kind words, @LEGO Train 12 Volts! You're absolutely right regarding the reason for the differently shaped buffers. It's prototypical, of course, as most vehicles of this era had that configuration. Wikipedia describes it as follows:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buffer_(rail_transport)#Shape 1 hour ago, LEGO Train 12 Volts said: The dark green color is one of my favourites, even though terribly expensive (unless you order some bulk from bluebrixx) Actually I ordered the dark green 1x3 bricks from Webrick - kind of self-defence, I suppose, for one (!) genuine Lego brick costs about 8 € (!!!!!) on Bricklink - and I needed 42 of them. But don't tell anyone... All other parts are real Lego, except for the wheels, of course, which are from BBB. Edited July 24, 2023 by Sven J Quote
monai Posted July 25, 2023 Posted July 25, 2023 Hallo Sven I've already seen your wagon elsewhere (in Deutsch) but I prefer make my congratulations here. Really on your standards, which are very very high. Alles gute! Sergio Quote
Supplement_Creatif Posted July 25, 2023 Posted July 25, 2023 Beautiful wagon! It is also very cool to see different scales other then 8 wide and 6 wide models. It is jam packed with such great details! cheers, Quote
zephyr1934 Posted July 26, 2023 Posted July 26, 2023 Okay, so you bought a nice LGB car and painted little lines to look like the edges of bricks... Seriously though, your work continues to amaze as you push the envelope of brick built trains. Quote
Sven J Posted July 26, 2023 Author Posted July 26, 2023 Thank you very much, @Supplement_Creatif and @zephyr1934! 6 hours ago, zephyr1934 said: Okay, so you bought a nice LGB car and painted little lines to look like the edges of bricks... Quote
LEGO Train 12 Volts Posted July 27, 2023 Posted July 27, 2023 Thanks Sven ... I learned a new thing about the buffers! Quote
*thomas* Posted July 28, 2023 Posted July 28, 2023 It looks amazing. Your builds are just gorgeous! Quote
Sven J Posted July 28, 2023 Author Posted July 28, 2023 Thank you @Shiva and @*thomas*!@LEGO Train 12 Volts You're welcome! Quote
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