I think it depends on what type of texture your looking for. Use different types of bread to get the texture that suites your prototype. They all take paint differently and it also depends on water based or oil paint.
$5.99 per month is the basic pay-as-you-go rate, which is $71.88 per year.
If you want to subscribe annually, the price will be $55 per year (4.58 per month).
Early adopters (first three months) the price will be $44 per year (3.67 per month).
The idea is if you want to kick the tires for a month or two, it's about $6 per month but if you want to do much more than that, we are making it much more cost effective to do the annual subscription. By subscribing so you have access to the 40+ hours and growing video library whenever you need it, then it's definitely less than the $5 sandwich.
The exact launch date has not been set, but it's expected to be before December (still fall).
Joe Fugate
Publisher, Model Railroad Hobbyist magazine
Comments
I like both kinds of views...
I like wide angle shots and then cut in with close up shots. Not sure what the proper balance is, but too much of one type of shot can ruin a scene.
Ken L.
Re: don't wants
What I don't want:
Relentless music
Eternal introductions
Swoosh dissolves
Cute animated trains pulling the captions across the screen.
What I need:
Closed captions or subtitles
Well lighted and focused camerawork.
Basically what I wrote before being shot down by Joe. Jose.
_______________________
Long life to Linux The Great!
Bread type restrictions
I just reviewed the video again:
Do the Colorado narrow-guage modelers have to use Sourdough?
Don - CEO, MOW super.
Rincon Pacific Railroad, 1960. - Admin.offices in Ventura County
HO scale std. gauge - interchanges with SP; serves the regional agriculture and oil industries
DCC-NCE, Rasp PI 3 connected to CMRI, JMRI - ABS searchlight signals
I think it depends on what
I think it depends on what type of texture your looking for. Use different types of bread to get the texture that suites your prototype. They all take paint differently and it also depends on water based or oil paint.
Toast it first for
Toast it first for weathering.
Alan
All the details: www.LKOrailroad.com Just the highlights: MRH blog
When I was a kid... no wait, I still do that. HO, 28x32, double deck, 1969, RailPro
Pricing details ...
Okay, here's the pricing details ...
$5.99 per month is the basic pay-as-you-go rate, which is $71.88 per year.
If you want to subscribe annually, the price will be $55 per year (4.58 per month).
Early adopters (first three months) the price will be $44 per year (3.67 per month).
The idea is if you want to kick the tires for a month or two, it's about $6 per month but if you want to do much more than that, we are making it much more cost effective to do the annual subscription. By subscribing so you have access to the 40+ hours and growing video library whenever you need it, then it's definitely less than the $5 sandwich.
The exact launch date has not been set, but it's expected to be before December (still fall).
Joe Fugate
Publisher, Model Railroad Hobbyist magazine
Read my blog
Two Questions:
1) Can early adopters pay for more than one year at that rate?
2) Early adopters will have to pay for the "regular rates" once their initial subscription runs out, correct?
Ken L
Early adopters rate
If early adopters want to subscibe for up to two years at the super discounted rate, we will make that available.
Once your early adopter subscription is up, the rate beomes the normal rate for your subscription renewal, that's true.
Joe Fugate
Publisher, Model Railroad Hobbyist magazine
Read my blog
Can't wait! I'm really
Can't wait! I'm really looking forward to this!
Rick
The Richlawn Railroad Website - Featuring the L&N in HO / MRH Blog / MRM #123
Mt. 22: 37- 40
That's a deal!
Please do send me a link to the signup page when it becomes available!
Thanks,
~Kevin
Appreciating Modeling In All Scales but majoring in HO!
Not everybody likes me, luckily not everybody matters.