BuckeyeBullet
Observer
This one's a little off-topic, but it involves an overland vehicle of sorts and applies to many. I work at Golden Spike NHS in northern Utah (where the two ends of the first transcontinental railroad met) and I'm one of the crew members on the two replica steam locomotives we operate. To protect the #119's tender coal storage area we have a commercially-applied spray-on bedliner. It's showing its age and has some bare metal areas that need to be touched up. Anyone have a suggestion for something I can use to touch up the material? Prefer a store-bought product but durability is more important. Has to be tough since it's regularly exposed to shovel hits, settling coal, and it gets smacked when we dump coal in with the front end loader.
BTW Golden Spike is at the eastern end of the Transcontinental Railroad National Back Country Byway managed by the BLM. I've met a few folks on the Portal who've taken that trail. Easy and level (it's a former RR grade) but there are quite a few neat historical places along it. Stop and say hi if you're out that way!
Thanks
BTW Golden Spike is at the eastern end of the Transcontinental Railroad National Back Country Byway managed by the BLM. I've met a few folks on the Portal who've taken that trail. Easy and level (it's a former RR grade) but there are quite a few neat historical places along it. Stop and say hi if you're out that way!
Thanks