Recently Verlinden
have released a nice looking bunch of lighting, power and
transformer station poles to deck out your modern warfare dio. We thought these
would be right handy for a lot of modellers so why not build them up ourselves
to look at them?
Triple Build review
- Verlinden street utility poles:
#2818
1:35th scale
$38.95
#2822
1:35th scale
$26.95
#2823
1:35th scale
$19.95
All of these are
available from Verlinden Directly or their Distributors
Worldwide.
When making a well thought
out diorama you must think in three dimensions. Width, breadth and height. As long as having your vehicle, figures and
other stuff on the ground, and going up higher with tall tanks etc. you need
something to “top it all off” with a little height. When making a forest,
wilderness or countryside diorama this is easy – just stick a tree in there.
What about when your dio occurs on a treeless plain or even more – and fairly
commonplace now – in a city? Modern cities, especially in the Middle East or Afghanistan
have no real trees that would look in place in most situations.
Especially in Iraq power is a unreliable resource and during the war powerlines were in dissaray
I am forever looking
for a tall element to add to my dioramas. Having scarcely little to call on in
a modern setting I was impressed to see these all new items in Verlinden’s catalogue
last month. An email later and they were winging their way to us to review in a
big white safely packed box. It took a week tops from the US to Australia.
When the box arrived
I was a little shocked to see just how tall these pole light and power sets
were. The street lights were not so large but the utility pole and street
transformer station were really BIG. The boxes are nearly 35 cm long and 10 cm
square – a lot of padding in there in the form of bubble wrap and long strips
of cream resin.
The resin in our
kits was pretty good – no real problem with bubbles and not too much to cut off
– the kits themselves really didn’t take too long to make and with a little
extra caring and trimming they went together pretty easily.
Let’s look at all
three sets together to see what they are like….
#2818
1:35th scale
$38.95
We now have the
power to recreate a modern(ish) street side transformer station in cream resin
in 35th scale. The kit is made up of
sixty-two parts of cream resin, plastic rod/plastic flex tubing that makes not
only the metal poles but the conductor coils and the metal cabinets the
electrical gizmos are hidden in it. We also get a base of resin “concrete” and
of course some wiring to add to the scene.
This set is laid out
by the height of the steel & concrete poles. The longer one is a 28cm pole
and the other shorter one is the 21cm concrete pole. You could chip these and
wear them as you like and they will come out very well. The long strip of
casting block resin is a simple enough removal – use the non-cutting edge of
your large hobby knife or box cutter to score the resin – then carve the remnants
with the back of the knife as well which straightens the edges nicely.
The concrete foundation these two poles sit on increase their height as well by
2cm. It is a rough looking block and quite thick. The transformer boxes and
transformer itself are well moulded. You will have to do some roughing up work
on the back of the boxes as this is the pouring side that is not finished.
Here are all of the
other little bits of the kit. Several conductor porcelain parts, several small
nuts and bolts which simply sit on the other side of the parts that are fixed
to a pole make for a believable fixed item. The streetlight and pole that holds
it is included here which is a great thing to either add or not. The steel “I”
beams are what the transformer itself sits on.
The base encompasses
the two power poles – I built the poles and their attachments first – then I secured
them to the concrete looking base. The “I” beams are added across the two poles
and then the transformer sits on top of these two beams.
The only thing needed are the wiring which you can add to yourself. I used the
bendable plastic pipe included in the kit and there is wire here to use as
well- this I did not add as I wanted to paint it.
I like this set up –
a lot of depth and options to customize the pole layout to suit your street set
up. Once the wiring is added this will look very convincing.
#2822
1:35th scale
$26.95
To add to the earlier power poles from Verlinden comes this
set of two poles to include in your 35th scale diorama. Both
are made from cream resin but have the look of pitted concrete which will very
much suit a Middle East modern warfare diorama or a European countryside piece.
Bird poo is not included!
The two separate concrete blocks anchor this all on to the
deck of your dio. A small and large transformer is included here as well.
The longer one is a 28cm pole and the other shorter one is
the 21cm concrete pole. Again they are a simple removal process from the resin
pouring block. Just use my patented method of scoring, bending and snapping off
the excess and then shaving the rough bit with again the back of the hobby
knife. It saves time and fresh blades and it’s the fastest and best method I found.
When building these about the same time was taken as the
transformer station. Mainly because the porcelain insulators of the cables and
the brackets that come on have to be trimmed of excess carefully... The
rubberised wire works well for a power line to the house – I would use a thin
insulated or electrical bit of twisted wire to make the pole-pole connection.
Again they are a great pair – not really sure why they are
different heights – but if you need two shorter poles just get the saw out!
#2823
1:35th scale
$19.95
A single light is shown here but the cream resin set includes
two streetlamps. This light could well do a 1960’s era and beyond streetlight
and it does suit the telegraph and street power utilities set already launched
from Verlinden.
These two lights are quite elegant – they are pretty
streamlined so they can be used right up to the present day. They look like
they could fit into most modern dios.
Small instructions show how to use the copper wire included
to bend the flexible nylon included in the kit.
The two poles which secure these posts in are already
mounted on the concrete bases already. You can easily make out the doors used
to gain access to the poles.
The brass is used to bend the end of these poles – I used a cylinder
to bend these to make the same angle for both of them.
This is a great duo of poles as well.
Adam Norenberg
All of these products
are now available on the Verlinden
website at the links above..Thanks to the VP crew for sending them
to us to build and review
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