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Need help in building a curved bridge
- goobnav
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- Socalz44
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- goobnav
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- Socalz44
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- ztrack
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The photos is from RailPictures.net"
www.railpictures.net/viewphoto.php?id=306514&nseq=815
Rob
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- bambuko
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I suggest you edit out hotlinked picture and leave just the link ...
Chris
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- ztrack
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Good point in the Railpictures user policy. I do give them credit when I post photos from their pages. I think it is important to keep the images in-situ with conversation, which is why I also give them full credit.
Rob
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- ULie
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Socalz44 wrote:
You're right that about half of the Z-world uses the Maerklin curved bridges. I do so too...Eric, No one said you can't use the Marklin curves. Half the Z scales in the world probably do.
...there's just one downside to them: they are only available in 145mm radii. All other radii bridges in Z-scale are either kitbashed or entirely scratch build.
GreetingZ, HilZen,
Uwe
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- David K. Smith
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You can find lots of curved metal bridges, but virtually all of them used for highways.More modern curved bridges tend to be concrete. You don't see the straight metal sections as they are covered. I personally have never seen a curved metal girder bridge, but they probably exist and have pie-shaped wedges in the outside curve.
netfiles.uiuc.edu/jfhajjar/www/home/Curved%20Girder%20Bridge.jpg
Modern construction techniques can produce a truly curved deck railroad bridge, but they are extraordinarily rare (indeed, non-existent until this century, AFAIK), and the curve is also extremely gentle. This example is found in Iran:
www.waagner-biro.at/uploads/tx_waagnerbiroreferenzen/RAFSANJAN_IRAN06.JPG
Much more typical truly curved railroad bridges will be stone viaducts, such as this one:
s0.geograph.org.uk/photos/26/13/261327_4d3eb978.jpg
Or, as Jim mentioned, wooden trestles...
www.canadianarchitect.com/common_scripts/xtq_images/212049-104731.jpg
Part of the problem is that, in the model world, curves are radically tighter than they are in the real world, where subtle changes in the angle of straight components create a gentle curve that can fool the eye into thinking everything is curved, as in Rob's example. Here's another, more typical curved deck girder bridge:
aroundtheville.files.wordpress.com/2009/11/curved-section-of-rr-track.jpg
Or this one:
img.photobucket.com/albums/v238/CDF/Rail%20image/52026837_6c22b7fb22.jpg
Camera angles can exaggerate the effect, as in this shot:
pete-n-pam.com/main%20pics/page12pics/carriages%20on%20bridge.jpg
Unfortunately, Märklin's curved bridges could never support anything in real life, not even themselves--they'd simply fall over. Not only are the curves impossibly tight, but the support structure is far too shallow and lightweight. Sorry to disappoint, but it's all to do with physics.
ztrack wrote:
The issue is not to do with giving them credit; it's to do with hotlinking to photos. I agree that embedding images in posts is better at illustrating a point, but it is after all their bandwidth as well as their photo...Good point in the Railpictures user policy. I do give them credit when I post photos from their pages. I think it is important to keep the images in-situ with conversation, which is why I also give them full credit.
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- ULie
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Socalz44 wrote:
and here's the probably most famous curved railroad stone viaduct . In Z it would be a radii of 454mm...Much more typical truly curved railroad bridges will be stone viaducts, such as this one:
s0.geograph.org.uk/photos/26/13/261327_4d3eb978.jpg
And this seems to me the one that makes most out of the curve. The RhB Brusio loop .
GreetingZ, HilZen,
Uwe
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- David K. Smith
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Yikes! We worry about 4% grades on curves... that's 7%!And this seems to me the one that makes most out of the curve. The RhB Brusio loop .
zierke.com/shasta_route/picpages/1-3-75.html
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- bambuko
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Chris,
Good point in the Railpictures user policy. I do give them credit when I post photos from their pages. I think it is important to keep the images in-situ with conversation, which is why I also give them full credit.
Rob
Rob, I agree with you that it is indeed best to insert image into the post for clarity etc, however ...
I don't think you have read Railpictures Photo Usage Policy, so let me quote you precise passages I am referring to:
...All photos ... are Copyrighted © by their original photographers, and may not be reused in any way without express written permission...
Any unauthorized use of these photos, ... non-commercial use...is strictly forbidden...
...we ask that you do not directly link to photos on this website for use on other websites. This is an unnecessary waste of our bandwidth, and costs us money...
So, unless you have permission, or it is your own photo, I am asking you, please, to remove the picture. If you have permission to use it, than put the picture on either ZCS or your own server, to avoid "borrowing" their bandwidth.
Crediting source is sometimes good enough, but not in the case where owner specifically forbids you to use their material.
Chris
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- tealplanes
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ztrack wrote:
...All photos ... are Copyrighted © by their original photographers, and may not be reused in any way without express written permission...
Any unauthorized use of these photos, ... non-commercial use...is strictly forbidden...
Chris,
This subject has always puzzled me a bit, (lack of understanding).
Does the above quote mean you can't download any rail pictures for your own personal viewing for reference later or sharing them with someone else?
Perhaps you could enlarge a bit on the particulars of this issue.
Thanks
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- ULie
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as I read it you can of course download them for your personal viewing. Even if you want to store them for later use as a reference while building a layout I see no problem. If you want to share them with others it starts to get tricky. If you just view them at home with your wife and kids I still see no problem, but when you want to publish them in any way: in a thread like this, or as a background on your layout that you show on an event, or in a book that you are writing about making trees (hey couldn't you do that... ) or in a magazine online or printed you need the permission of the owner of the rights on this picture. This permission you have either to get from the owner directly: written permission, or maybe it is given in advance like for some pictures at wikipedia.
GreetingZ, HilZen,
Uwe
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- bambuko
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Anyway... let's not hijack curved bridge thread
If we want to discuss copyright, netiquette, etc, etc - start another thread please
Chris
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- tealplanes
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That's kind of what I figured, but wasn't real sure.
Back to curved bridges.......
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- goobnav
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