P r o j e c t L a n a k i l a
Lanakila Photo taken May 2006 Aptos California
One of my favorite pastimes is scale modeling. You learn a lot from a scale model. You learn to appreciate how difficult the prototype
was to design and construct as well as the history behind the prototype.
This was not one of the most difficult projects I have undertaken. I had a lot of help along the way. I made some new friends, I picked up some
new skills and honed
some old ones, but most of all I learned a great deal about a piece of Hawaiian history, the Oahu Railway and Land Company.
What you see above is the finished project, complete with everything, including rc controls. I made some concessions adding the rc. I didn't
modify the tender to look exactly like the prototype because I need to get in and out of the tender to charge the battery for the throttled.
That meant the long hand rails on the side would have been way to fragile. I did convert it to oil though which actually helped provide more room
for the rc speed control, reciever and the batteries.
I also opted for the standard surface controller because of it's cost and size. The drawback being that the controls have a steering feature
that I don't need and the throttle requires constant pressure.
I might modify the transmitter (controller) so that the trigger doesn't spring back in position.

The breaks didn't turn out as well as I would have liked. I had a hard time making out the details on the image in the book so I did the
best I could. All in all I made a lot of mistakes and have decided that I want to do the whole thing over again in Brass starting with the
Bachmann drive. I scored another engine off ebay, so that shouldn't be too hard.
I was really impressed with the way the front plate turned out though (I etched in brass with the star). I also liked most of the way the head
light ended up. The number plates on the sides are too low I'll have to adjust my plans. The best part of it is the reflector which was easier
to make from scratch than it was to find one the right size.
The images are shots I took in my backyard in Aptos. As a final word, I just wanted any readers to know a little about Aptos California.
Aptos has a lot of ties with Hawaii in the past. Claus Sprekels used port Aptos (gone now) to unload sugar cane from Hawaii and when the
kingdom of Hawaii was usurped he used the 28000 acres he purchased here to grow beets so he wouldn't have to rely on cane anymore.
Clause Sprekles was a good friend to the kingdom and to King David Kalakaua and his sister Liluokalani. He helped finance a coupe to recover
her throne.

When I first came to Aptos in 1972 or there abouts I had the good fortune to attend a party at the Sprekeles mansion in Nisiene Marks park.
There was still a portrait of King Kalakaua in the dining room.
S T E P O N E