Weyerhaeuser and Other Wrap Graphics

I was forwarded some photos and material to try to do this neat Weyerhaeuser wrap from the mid 1980s, with a red-orange section of bark and tree rings. Sadly I can’t currently find any good photos on-line in a place I can actually link to for this post, but I did get a couple of good ones to work from. It’s a pretty attractive scheme:

PDF | XLSX

These two simpler Weyerhauser wraps from the 1970s-80s period were also done and added to the archive a little while back, but not highlighted in any blog post:

Weyerhauser “Shed-Pak” – ~1972
PDF | XLSXPrototype

Weyerhaeuser Building Products – ~1976-1985
PDF | XLSXPrototype

I already have one load in progress using the latter 1980s wrap.

They also join this modern (currently in use) Weyerhauser wrap that’s also been in the archive for a while, making a nice selection of period Weyerhaeuser graphics:

Weyerhaeuser – ~2004-Present
PDF | XLSXPrototype

 

In addition to the additional Weyerhauser material, here’s a few more new ones:

ARBEC – 2015+
PDF | XLSXPrototype

Canadian Wood Products – ~2015
PDF | XLSX – Prototype

Clermond Hamel (Saint-Ephrem-de-Beauce, QC) – ~20xx?
PDF | XLSX – Prototype

Clermond Hamel – ~2014
PDF | XLSX – Prototype

Clermond Hamel (125th Anniversary) – 2015
PDF | XLSX – Prototype

Nakina Forest Products (Nakina, ON) – ~2004
PDF | XLSX Prototype

Olav Haavaldsrud (Hornepayne, ON) – ~2015
PDF | XLSX – Prototype

I’ve also added a bit of detail to the modern Dubreuil Forest Products graphic and re-posted that one:

Dubreuil Forest Products (Dubreuilville, ON) – ~1999-2007
PDF | XLSXPrototype

As always, dates preceded with a “~” are approximated based off a small set of photographic sightings and may be applicable for a wider range than stated.

Hopper Interior Paint and Weathering

While I had the airbrush and paint booth fired up this evening to do some priming and initial paint work on a different project I’ve been working on this weekend (more on that sometime later when I’ve made some more progress) I also ran about a dozen of these hoppers through the paint shop to paint the interiors.

IMG_5146

I picked up at least part of the technique (with regards to some of the colours and order of use) from an old RMC magazine article, although probably any time anyone ever does something, they always put their own slight twist on it.

My first step is to paint the interior with a light primer colour. For some cars in raw grey this was not always necessary, but as I have several cars molded in several different colours including red, yellow, green and gray (most were stripped from various roadnames) and a primed interior is required to let the actual colours cover properly. Once primed, I gave the interior a base coat of Model Master “Steel” to give it the metallic silvery of bare polished steel. Then – working very lightly, and progressively up the sides of the interior – blend in Gunmetal, Rail Brown and Rust. Go real easy on the gunmetal and rail brown – the gunmetal is a dark almost black colour, and the rail brown just helps blend with the rust and shouldn’t be too prominent – and the whole interior can get a really light final mist of rust to blend all together.

The one really tricky bit about these interiors is the angled pipe bracing. You really have to be careful to mist the colours in from both sides around the braces to avoid “paint shadow” where the brace blocks the spray. (I did end up with a couple cars with a slightly noticeable vertical line at some of the braces.

IMG_5147

I may go over some of these interiors later again, after the cars are fully painted and lettered, with some powders and pan pastels to add a bit of additional colour for specific loads that these cars carried around Michipicoten and Wawa – limestone, coke, sinter and raw ores, but otherwise this is the basic colouring for the car interiors. The top of the car will later be masked off completely to paint the exterior body of the car.

AC 8201-8500 Series Hoppers Underbody Detail

This post is mainly just included for completeness for the hopper series, as the details are basically just assembled according to the kit instructions, although as Walthers doesn’t really sell cars with modeler-applied parts anymore, I should perhaps note a couple of things.

IMG_5144

Here’s four of the around two dozen cars currently in progress, with many more still in boxes waiting their turn. You can see the door connecting/locking bars and spring details all installed. You’ll note if assembling a kit car, or re-assembling a stripped down car (in which case you’re not likely to have a diagram/instruction sheet) that there are two distinct versions of the bar details that definitely have to go on in a certain direction, as one has an extra bit of the locking mechanism detail and needs to align with the cast lock detail on the hopper bottom. (However the arrangement of the mounting pins makes this impossible to screw up.)

If you’re adventurous you could also replace the flat thick kit pieces with styrene channel to better represent the prototype parts in finer detail, replace the tail end bits of the door bracing with additional bits of styrene strip, fabricate the extra loop for the door lock on the appropriate bars. I did not do this.

One major note that apparently needs to be mentioned is the door springs, which attach to the door bars on one end, and the centre sill of the underframe on the other to cushion the impact of the doors dropping open when the car is unloaded, as the rapid-discharge hopper design basically opens up the entire bottom of the car. You can see them installed in the model photo above, and half-visible in shadow to the right side of this detail photo (courtesy of Blair Smith) below:

ac8390detail

If you get some of the latest Platinum Line releases from Walthers, any of their cars without additional detail parts for air-actuated doors (i.e. a big air tank mounted on the car end) have omitted the spring details. And unfortunately, since the detail parts are not add-on pieces on an included parts sprue, the springs are just not included in the box.

Apparently Walthers thinks that only the cars with air-actuated equipment has these door springs, which is entirely false. Sadly there’s not likely too much that can be said there, and since they don’t stock additional parts (I tried and failed to get replacements from them, and they seemed not to consider the missing parts a mistake) I will likely be saving a couple of parts sprues to make a mold and copy-cast in resin the needed parts for about 2 dozen such cars missing the springs.

New Year, New Wraps

Abitibi-Consolidated – 1997-2007 (to Abitibi-Bowater, 2007)
PDF | XLSXPrototype

Abitibi-Consolidated (Finlay Premium) – 2000-2007
PDF | XLSXPrototype

Domtar – ~2000-2010 (to EACOM)
PDF | XLSXPrototype

Finlay Forest Industries (Mackenzie, BC) – ~1990
PDF | XLSXPrototype

Finlay Premium (Mackenzie, BC) – ~1996 (to Abitibi-Consolidated, 2000)
PDF | XLSXPrototype

MacMillan Bloedel – ~1995
PDF | XLSXPrototype

Normick Perron (La Sarre, QC) – ~1973-1989
PDF | XLSXPrototype

Last Call for 2015

One last round of lumber wrap graphics for the end of the year. Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to all!

Twin Rivers (Plaster Rock, NB) – ~2011-2012
PDF | XLSXPrototype

Boisaco (Sacre-Coeur, QC) – ~2015
PDF | XLSXPrototype

EACOM – ~2011-Present (mostly former Domtar mills)
PDF | XLSXPrototype

Resolute Forest Products – 2011-Present (formerly Abitibi-Bowater)
PDF | XLSX – Prototype

Decker Lake (Burns Lake, BC) – ~2005-2012
PDF | XLSXPrototype

Dunkley Lumber Ltd. (Hixon, BC) – ~2003-2012
PDF | XLSXPrototype

Stuart Lake (Fort St. James, BC) – ~1996 (closed 2007)
PDF | XLSXPrototype
(more modern version of previously posted graphic)

West Fraser – ~1974
PDF | XLSXPrototype

West Fraser – ~1986
PDF | XLSX
(Older version of previously posted graphic)
(Prototype photo on p. 109 CP Color Guide Vol. 2 from Morning Sun Books)

Westar Timber (Watson Island, BC) – ~1986
PDF | XLSX
(Prototype photo on p. 109 CP Color Guide Vol. 2 from Morning Sun Books)