FW: Planning Mill

NW Modeling List nw-modeling-list at nwhs.org
Fri Oct 2 08:20:22 EDT 2015


I inadvertently sent the previous msg before I was finished writing it.

 

A planing mill is spelled planing.

 

A planing mill may look like any other rectangular building from the outside.

 

I did mention there were 128 documents in the Archives associated with the phrase “planing mill” as an indicator of where additional information could be found.

 

I assume every modeler decides what is worth modeling after seeking pertinent information.

 

Alex Schust

 

 

From: Alex Schust [mailto:aschust2 at comcast.net] 
Sent: Friday, October 02, 2015 8:02 AM
To: 'NW Modeling List'
Subject: RE: Planning Mill

 

A planing mill is spelled planing.

 

A planing mill may look like any other rectangular building from the outside.

 

I did mention there were 128 documents in the Archives associated with the phrase “planing mill.”

 

I assume every modeler decides what is worth modeling after seeking pertinent information.

 

Alex Schust

 

 

 

From: NW-Modeling-List [mailto:nw-modeling-list-bounces at nwhs.org] On Behalf Of NW Modeling List via NW-Modeling-List
Sent: Thursday, October 01, 2015 9:28 PM
To: nw-modeling-list at nwhs.org
Cc: NW Modeling List
Subject: Planning Mill

 

 

 

Regarding the inquiry on lumber planing mills ... Alex Schust wrote ... 

 

>>>   Attached is a photo for East Portsmouth yard planing mill.

 <http://nwhs.org/archivesdb/detail.php?ID=20653> http://nwhs.org/archivesdb/detail.php?ID=20653     <<<

 

My take and question ... 

 

Sure nuf ... the mill photo looks like a lumber facility, but how would I -- a Lazy-Boy addict -- tell this planing mill from any other lumber facility. Are there any give-away aspects in the photo that tell us that ... YES .... OH SURE ... this is a planing mill?

 

The way the lumber is stacked?

 

The silo and tower at left?

 

The roof architecture?

 

The four guys loading the box cars?

 

The out buildings?

 

The hand-written inscription? 

 

BTW ... that brings up spelling and pronouncing correctness.

 

Is it spelled (in the pix) P-L-E-N-I-N-G? Or is that third letter an "A" squared at the top? In either case, are there one or two letters "N" in planing? 

 

Also, how is this word pronounced? Like one who plans ... planning? Like one who does things with airplanes ... plane-ing? Or like one who does things with plens ... plenning ... whatever that might be?

 

My question is: How can this fellow create a planing mill such that other modelers would clearly recognize it as a planing mill? Don't all the fresh wood working sites look more or less the same (with that big round blade, often hidden)? 

 

Should the modeler go to the effort of planing-mill-or-bust to create a lumber facility that, in the end, viewers might or might not see it as a planing facility? Or, should he just go for the least expensive lumber mill kit he can find? Would most any lumber facility kit be close enough, at least as a starter?

 

As with this Portsmouth pix, to me the only thing that says planing mill is the hand written title. Maybe the give-away points escape me, but to me this is a "plain" old lumber site. How can the modeler dress it up so it says "planing mill" to the viewers?

 

I operate on a friend's terrific railroad that well represents the Poky, Bluefield to Williamson. I love it that I recognize so many facilities on his railroad from the days in the 90s when I produced a video about most of that stretch of track. Recognition of a real facility come-to-life on a model railroad is cool ... very neat to see and it is a great compliment to the modeler that he/she created something that looks enough like the real thing such that the guys recognize it. 

 

In this planing mill case, I'm just curious how the modeler who inquired about a planing mill will be able to unequivocally show that it is a planing facility and not just another sawmill or particle board plant or 2-by-4 cutter? I think he has his work cut out for himself. I wish this modeler well.

 

A plain old planing mill for planes? ... Bob

 

Bob Loehne
7028 Tallent Court 

Sherrill's Ford, NC 28673
800-611-1218 
oezbob at aol.com 

  _____  

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