peterbunce
1880's Colorado Narrow gauge on 45mm track
Hi,
Alas I am no alchemist, but as I model Colorado before 1893 when the US Government stopped the silver standard for their currency, thus plunging the economic performance of Colorado into a very sharp decline, I wanted some silver bars - which are a collection of various metals, partially smelted, and with other metals, and some pure silver ingots, to be used for senic items for the depot or such.
As I suspected the final result was going to be small, as the real thing was both heavy and valuable.
So I fiddled about and used up some scrap from my capacious collection and made some multi metal (not fully smelted for the individual metals) bars ? very like pig iron in general detail, on the much smaller silver ingots.
The bars are in 5 bar units and are 29mm long: a piece of PVC solid foam board 5mm wide and 3mm thick makes the base, and a bit of scrap tube for the curved shape on top. Glued together, with some filler in the ends of the tube, and at the join of the two bits, then they are painted a good silver color.
The (pure) silver ingots, being more valuable and heavier are much smaller , at a whisker over 11mm long and being 4 x 5mm in section, slope the ends and stack them up with glue; when dry paint them. I think the sides were sloped but I did not add that as it seems to be very slight, though would have made them easier to remove from their sand molds.
Here are some photos with a ?Fine Folks? figure ? who is absent from his normal location as boss of my Steam Donkey guarding them, and providing a comparison.
The bars are 29mm square the height of the 5 sets of bars each of 5 bars each, is 23mm high; the ingots are 15mm square, and 40mm and 25mm high respectively.
Quite easy to make but a bit of a time consuming exercise! Still to make are some sacks of the crushed, but not yet smelted ore - I have not worked out a size for the sacks which it is suggested, could weigh up to 200lbs.
Here are some photos of the bars and ingots
a view of both with a scale ruler for size.
a slightly higher view, the figure is a scale 5.5 feet tall, and well built - he has been taken away from his location as boss of my steam donkey. Hence the spanner, but it would be useful for any thieves! He is one of the Fine Folks range. which are at
http://www.warriorrunlocoworks.com/finefolk.php
now the opposite a lower level view - the filler at the end of the tubes (2.5mm diameter) needs some more adding; that will be done!
I may also add some more to the somewhat small pile, there is a photo in the Denver Public Library digital collection that has the caption '65 tons of silver' - that has in excess of 400 bars as the main subject! A bit much that I think :-
Yours Peter.
Alas I am no alchemist, but as I model Colorado before 1893 when the US Government stopped the silver standard for their currency, thus plunging the economic performance of Colorado into a very sharp decline, I wanted some silver bars - which are a collection of various metals, partially smelted, and with other metals, and some pure silver ingots, to be used for senic items for the depot or such.
As I suspected the final result was going to be small, as the real thing was both heavy and valuable.
So I fiddled about and used up some scrap from my capacious collection and made some multi metal (not fully smelted for the individual metals) bars ? very like pig iron in general detail, on the much smaller silver ingots.
The bars are in 5 bar units and are 29mm long: a piece of PVC solid foam board 5mm wide and 3mm thick makes the base, and a bit of scrap tube for the curved shape on top. Glued together, with some filler in the ends of the tube, and at the join of the two bits, then they are painted a good silver color.
The (pure) silver ingots, being more valuable and heavier are much smaller , at a whisker over 11mm long and being 4 x 5mm in section, slope the ends and stack them up with glue; when dry paint them. I think the sides were sloped but I did not add that as it seems to be very slight, though would have made them easier to remove from their sand molds.
Here are some photos with a ?Fine Folks? figure ? who is absent from his normal location as boss of my Steam Donkey guarding them, and providing a comparison.
The bars are 29mm square the height of the 5 sets of bars each of 5 bars each, is 23mm high; the ingots are 15mm square, and 40mm and 25mm high respectively.
Quite easy to make but a bit of a time consuming exercise! Still to make are some sacks of the crushed, but not yet smelted ore - I have not worked out a size for the sacks which it is suggested, could weigh up to 200lbs.
Here are some photos of the bars and ingots

a view of both with a scale ruler for size.

a slightly higher view, the figure is a scale 5.5 feet tall, and well built - he has been taken away from his location as boss of my steam donkey. Hence the spanner, but it would be useful for any thieves! He is one of the Fine Folks range. which are at
http://www.warriorrunlocoworks.com/finefolk.php

now the opposite a lower level view - the filler at the end of the tubes (2.5mm diameter) needs some more adding; that will be done!
I may also add some more to the somewhat small pile, there is a photo in the Denver Public Library digital collection that has the caption '65 tons of silver' - that has in excess of 400 bars as the main subject! A bit much that I think :-
Yours Peter.