Construction of Steel Bins

My last post outlined the construction of the main office for Okanagan Seed & Feed. This business needs to be served by both rail and road. The railway will deliver bulk seed and feed components and will also pick up seed and feed components for customers. Trucks will also be able to take loads.

I had on my shelf the following plastic kit made by Rix Products. This includes all required parts EXCLUDING the bins themselves which I did not have on hand. However, judging by the picture the diameter of the bins would be too large for the available space on my layout so I needed to make my own.


I first decided on the dimensions (6 cm diameter and 15 cm high to the lip of the roof; about 2.4 inches by 5.9 inches) and sketched them out on 0.020 styrene sheets, cutting carefully so all edges were true.

I made three styrene disks to fit inside the bin, one each near the top, bottom and middle to provide some structural integrity. It turned out that my diameter was very slightly larger than that of a stack of pan pastel chalks, so I carefully wrapped the styrene sheet that will become the side walls around the pan pastels, as follows:


I next clamped the material as shown below and applied a thin bead of styrene cement to those places between the disk and sidewall only where they touch. I let this completely dry before proceeding to the next step.


I next used rubber bands, assisted by slight pressure from a clamp (clamp not shown below) to complete wrapping the side walls around the disk. Styrene cement was applied to complete the circle. I did this in two steps because to do it all at once was like watching a one-armed wallpaper hanger in action!



Once the adhesive had set I slid the pan pastels out from the bottom and inserted the middle internal styrene disk and glued it in place. Finally, I glued the internal styrene disk inside the other end (no pictures of these steps).

Next I used a compass to draw a styrene disk which became the roof. I carefully cut a pie-shaped slice out of the disk.


I then clamped this together so the edges butted and applied styrene adhesive, as follows:


I next glued the roof to the top of the bin, holding it in place with rubber bands for the adhesive to set:


I next added this detail, a clean-out hatch:


And ribs for the roof:


I then sprayed the top and around the cleanout hatch with Krylon silver metallic spray paint. Krylon is my favourite spray paint because it dries in 10 minutes with much less smell than other brands. I still use a full respirator and a paint booth which is vented outside because this stuff is hardly organic - your first clue is the skull and crossbones warning label on the can!


For the corrugated steel exterior I used a product that I purchased several years ago called Brunel Models Corrugated Iron Maker. This is HO scale but they do sell it for other scales. This little plastic device has two parts as shown below - a base and a smaller piece, both of which have very fine grooves machined in their surfaces. Aluminum foil is placed on the base and the smaller component is dragged smoothly across the foil. This produces a very nice scale facsimile of corrugated iron or steel. The following photograph shows a strip with many such corrugated panels. These are then cut to size and glued to your project. Tip: Brunel Models sells aluminum foil which they claim is more robust than ordinary kitchen foil. I have tried both and find that the ordinary kitchen foil works just as well.


Because I was fastening metal foil to styrene I did some experiments to determine the best adhesive to attach the panels. The adhesive needed to be very sticky yet dry clear and be strong enough that the panels would not peel off. I settled on one of my favourite adhesives, No More Nails by Lepage as seen here:


Here is a picture of a partially-completed bin:


I next painted the entire bin with the silver metallic Krylon spray paint because I wanted a uniform metallic colour for this structure which, after all, would be a uniform colour in real life:


I wanted to weather my bins to represent fairly significant ageing, with quite a lot of old rust on the roof and rust on the siding, exacerbated where there were imperfections caused by dents. I used a technique that I had read about in Model Railroad Hobbyist Magazine, one of my favourites. This was described in the What's Neat section of the February 2018 edition on pages 2 through 5. First acrylic burnt umber paint is applied to areas where there would be heavy "old" rust. Let this dry thoroughly before proceeding to the next step. Next, using burnt sienna OIL paint apply to areas where there would be newer rust. Apply a little paint thinner or Turpenoid to the oil paint to make it "bleed". The acrylic paint is not affected by the application of oil paint or paint thinner because the two substances are not compatible.

Here is a picture of a partially painted roof with the acrylic burnt umber:


Here is a picture of the same roof after the application of the oil burnt sienna after it has bled with Turpenoid and blotted slightly with a shop towel to remove excess paint:


Finally, this is the overall effect. Note that I also added some rust effects to the exterior walls, with extra rust where the panels have been dented:



All of the above steps provide for the train unloading and loading facility. I now needed to add a truck loading facility. I had on hand what had been designed as a wood chip loader from the Walthers Sawmill Outbuildings kit. I had not yet used this structure anywhere and decided that I could easily repurpose it as a truck loading device for feed and seed.

This is a picture of the kit that this device came from:


Here is the truck loading device added to the previous project:


Finally, a close-up shot of the finished project:



Next up ...... finishing the scenicing of the surrounding lands.