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Duncan's red cylinder supports and wrapped steam pipes from his dome are actually made from salvaged electric copper wire encased in plastic, which have been cut, primed and glued into place for painting. Nearing completion, Duncan and all the assembled parts have been weathered using acrylics from Plaid FolkArt, Apple Barrel, and Deco Art's Americana. Here are brass craft wire pipes, a sand pipe from the dome, and a brake crankshaft made from wire and balsa, mounted on his boiler housing and extending from his cab. Now begins another challenge, hand-making and mounting those extra details on the side. Sodor Island 3d TrainzDuncan has modified wooden buffer mounts here in addition to metal supports, and lamp irons made from balsa for replaceable headlamps! Door handles are also made from bent craft wire. Rivets are craft gems spray painted in primer to be glued in place, and here are naturally blended to the body shell with paint. More chipboard was used for the roof and smoothly painted black. The funnel is paper card rolled for his tall funnel and glued in place. I like this material a lot because it's thicker for some parts that require it's strength and thickness, but what I like most of all is its ability to bend easily for the curved edges of parts like this. This part was a fun challenge as it supports Duncan's smokebox. The running plate that extends to the front buffers, constructed from balsa. Next, I build the boiler and smoke box as a shell that covers snugly over the custom Lego Power Functions chassis, made from heavy weight card and glued as well as taped in place for the cylindar parts. With balsa controls like the throttle and brakes, I make the brass pipes with Darice Craft Designer's 16 gauge wire, with strips of thin paper to glue for facets, and covered with metallic sharpies that match with the pipe color. The main trigger was when a user uploaded the old 2010 content on DeviantArt, and was very rude to the SI3D staff when asked to take it down.On the workbench, I always start with the cab when building steam locomotives, and get the cab interior and details done first. Site co-founder Sean O'Connor shut down Sodor Island 3D on January 27, 2018, citing supposed "lack of respect". They also have a RWS route of the Ffarquhar Branch from Knapford to the harbor.
SODOR ISLAND 3D 2010 MODELS FULL
Currently, their Island of Sodor Route runs from Knapford to Kellsthorpe with the full Ffarquhar and Brendam branch as well.
SODOR ISLAND 3D 2010 MODELS SERIES
They resumed their Railway Series models in September 2016.
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In December 2015, they started making CGI variants of the 2012 models as well. These were the same, only they were a bit larger and featured 3D faces. Their last 2010 model was Percy, and in November 2013, they switched again to Trainz 2012. After almost 3 years, they began the 2010 range, which featured metallic paint, steam generating whistles, and eye direction. They produced Trainz 2006 content until July 2010, when they switched to Trainz 2009, featuring the "baked" look on the engines. With no other Trainz Thomas sites, SI3D was launched, with their first model being James.
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SI3D was founded around January 2009, when MSTNoodle removed his Trainz content from the UKBL web.
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