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    EMD SD45 - Union Pacific

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved WIP
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    • axeonaliasA Offline
      axeonalias
      last edited by

      Its look great, looks like you are having alot of fun, really nice to work with such detailed plans!

      https://sketchfab.com/Axeonalias

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      • Gus RG Offline
        Gus R
        last edited by

        Thanks axeonalias. I do enjoy myself doing this. Sometimes it borders on an obsession while being a challenge to figure out the plans without spending weeks on one part.

        I'm still amazed at the weight of these locomotives. The SD-45 weighs 368,000 pounds.

        www.instagram.com/gusrobatto/

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        • Gus RG Offline
          Gus R
          last edited by

          A hand brake wheel and a sand filler cap. The wheel is comprised of 5 radial components except for the lug which is just a group. Sand is used for traction on railroad.

          Hand-Brake-Scene-2.jpg

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          • majidM Offline
            majid
            last edited by

            This is crazy.... Wow!

            My inspiring A, B, Sketches book: https://sketchucation.com/shop/books/intermediate/2612-alphabet-inspired-sketches--inspiring-drills-for-architects--3d-artists-and-designers-

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            • Gus RG Offline
              Gus R
              last edited by

              Thanks Majid. I managed to reduce that wheel from a 1.2 MB component to 146 KB. Laid it out at first in Autocad which imports with 100 segment circles. The Former component was made up of 5 identical components. With fewer segments and making it out of 10 identical components I cut it down to size.

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              • Bryan KB Offline
                Bryan K
                last edited by

                ๐Ÿ‘ ๐Ÿ‘ ๐Ÿ‘

                See my portfolio at https://delphiscousin.blogspot.com/

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                • Gus RG Offline
                  Gus R
                  last edited by Gus R

                  I've been working on the railroad!

                  So, back to the SD45. I haven't nailed down the exact horn used by this number and at first I thought it might be the Nathan Chimes P3 but I think it might be a Prime Manufacturing 920. It can also be a Leslie. I started off with the P3 so I thought I'd soldier through it and possibly beyond what's needed for an overall locomotive model. No plans were available so I had to eyeball it with images of the P3 which required a deep search on the internet.

                  The mounting bracket was a little complicated.

                  Nathan-P3-A.jpg

                  Nathan-P3-B.jpg

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                  • Bryan KB Offline
                    Bryan K
                    last edited by

                    Wow! ๐Ÿ‘

                    See my portfolio at https://delphiscousin.blogspot.com/

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                    • Gus RG Offline
                      Gus R
                      last edited by

                      Thanks Bryan. It looks more like a polished trumpet right now but that's the fun of rendering. The material is Brushed Brass Metal Texture from Poliigon. I added the scratches in a material layer which if from 4K Imperfections.

                      I had some of the parts pointing in the wrong direction and fixed that since. It's too detailed to include in the final SD45 model or maybe not since I can always create a Thea proxy. I did the line work for the Nathan logos in Autocad. It wasn't that difficult since it's all straight lines. I'm able to reduce the amount of linework in SU by using Thea's bevel.

                      Now I'm thinking about modeling a trumpet.

                      Horns-2-Higher-Res-Scene-7.jpg

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                      • Gus RG Offline
                        Gus R
                        last edited by

                        SD-45-06-Scene-26.jpg

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                        • Gus RG Offline
                          Gus R
                          last edited by

                          Here's the Prime Manufacturing 920. It's a copy of the Leslie S-3L. It was a lot easier to model than the Nathan P3. The material is "Cast Iron Texture, Raw" from Poliigon.

                          Prime-PM920-Scene-8.jpg

                          Prime-PM920-Scene-3.jpg

                          Prime-PM920-Scene-9.jpg

                          www.instagram.com/gusrobatto/

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                          • ntxdaveN Offline
                            ntxdave
                            last edited by

                            This stuff blows my mind. I need to set my level back to beginner. ๐Ÿ˜ฎ

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                            • Gus RG Offline
                              Gus R
                              last edited by

                              Thanks Dave. Practice, practice, practice. I think in this particular case it helps to be able to visualize distances and think proportionally such as if something is 20 inches long you estimate other parts of an object which may have a diameter of 1 inch. Then if that looks wrong try 1.25 inches, etc. I know in the case of design it's also good to step away from the computer and think about how you'll tackle a project while lying in bed.

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                              • Gus RG Offline
                                Gus R
                                last edited by

                                This is the shutter and grille assembly. The shutters control airflow for air cooling. They're normally open. The inner grille goes on all three on each side of the locomotive. Omitted for clarity.

                                SD-45-08-Scene-35.jpg

                                SD-45-08-Scene-36.jpg

                                SD-45-08-Scene-37.jpg

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                                • Bryan KB Offline
                                  Bryan K
                                  last edited by

                                  Absolutely stunning detail!

                                  One of my first jobs out of high school was as an old school mechanical drafter. Real paper and pencils. I was creating drawings right down to nuts and bolts and welds for very large heavy equipment. I really appreciate mechanical details.

                                  I often skip them in my SU models to keep the file size manageable. SU 2017 does not like large file sizes.

                                  Again, excellent work!

                                  See my portfolio at https://delphiscousin.blogspot.com/

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