PRR X29 Box car 571777
#1
Posted 18 November 2022 - 07:05 PM
File Name: PRR X29 Box car 571777
File Submitter: timmuir
File Submitted: 18 Nov 2022
File Category: Box Cars Std Gauge
This archive contains one repaint of a Pennsylvania RR X29 box car model made in 2007. No modifications have been made to the original shapes. This is actually a new repaint of an old repaint I did years ago, which had very bad weathering. I think this one is a bit better, using rust and dust decals from Textures.com to clone from.
X29 No.571777 in brown paint.
Between 1924 and 1934, the Pennsylvania Railroad purchased or built over 30,000 of the X29 class of box cars. The X29 became the most prolific freight car of the late Steam/Transition Era. These cars appeared in every corner of the US and Canada. The Pennsylvania Railroad had more X29s than some railroads had total rolling stock! In 1939, there were 39,000 X29s on the PRR roster. By 1953, there were still 23,000 in service.
The X29 is shorter in height than other boxcars of its day, designed this way in order to navigate the tunnels into New York City. As it turned out, the tunnels were inappropriate for freight service, so the cars rarely saw that duty.
For more information on these cars, visit the web page devoted to them at:
http://prr.railfan.n....html?class=X29
Click here to download this file
#2
Posted 18 November 2022 - 07:08 PM
Open Rails 2022-11-18 06-13-08.jpg (1.39MB)
Number of downloads: 5
Open Rails 2022-11-18 06-16-58.jpg (2.01MB)
Number of downloads: 6
Same old X29, new paint.
#3
Posted 19 November 2022 - 03:23 AM
Absolutely superb. Your weathering has come a long way from the early days. It looks real.
:)
Thank you.
Regards,
Scott
#4
Posted 20 November 2022 - 05:53 AM
#5
Posted 20 November 2022 - 06:14 AM
timmuir, on 20 November 2022 - 05:53 AM, said:
Hi Tim,
Yeah - I’ve collected a bunch from there as well - thanks to your tip. You can also think outside the box like Erick - IIRC - he discussed applying grass textures to weather his cars. You have my most intense and best attempt at realistic weathering on those USRA PRR boxes I’ve seen you post recently. I was pretty happy with how they came out even on a 2D panel side. It takes time t do them right. You’ve obviously mastered one of the biggest improvements you can make - desaturate - those darn colors. I’ve wanted to repaint some of those X29’s of yours into LNE - no - must not deviate from the Mountain - I find it’s way too easy for me to run off on tangents…
;)
Always a pleasure…
Regards,
Scott
#6
Posted 20 November 2022 - 08:49 AM
Quote
LOL...I hear THAT! I'm constantly being sidetracked by some thing or another. This X29 is an example. Side tracks into side tracks, into side tracks....but it's all good because something usually comes from it that a few folks can use or would like to have. :)
#7
Posted 20 November 2022 - 09:15 AM
Randy
#8
Posted 20 November 2022 - 09:19 AM
Nothing bad in side tracks.
#9
Posted 20 November 2022 - 12:21 PM
timmuir, on 20 November 2022 - 08:49 AM, said:
Tim,
As long as the sidetrack isn't a dead end siding you are fine. Now if there are many sidetracks then it becomes a yard and that is good because it helps you sort things out and then build a new 'train of thought'.
Scott,
Those two recent locomotives of your's look real good. Now if only I can find the time to run some trains but I have been so busy here of late, had 48 projects in my architectural firm so far this year and I have been like a one arm paper hanger with the hives trying to keep up with all of them.
#10
Posted 20 November 2022 - 01:13 PM
There were X29's in the passenger fleet (steam and signal line fitted I believe), so those particular cars would have regularly gone through the Hudson and East River tubes.
I spent today operating on an O scale layout set on the Canada/US border areas (CN/CP/GN/Milw) and I pointed out to the owner that he needed at least one X29 on the layout. I don't know whether there is a reasonable model available off the shelf, I shall have to do some research. The layout was featured in the Continental Modeller magazine (British) a couple of years ago, it's the Colunbia and Western.