The Jacobite

Brian sent me another of his excellent videos….

Dear All,

Having managed to book 4 tickets 6 months ago on The Jacobite, I’ve finally travelled with friends between Fort William and Mallaig!

We were extremely lucky weather-wise – and here is a short film to give you a small flavour of the experience.

It was unusual to not have every window open with flailing arms and cameras / smart phones / recording gear these days, so I consider myself fortunate to capture these shots.

Cheers for now,

Brian

I last did this trip in 1973, with a diesel on the front – but it was still brilliant.

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Odd modelling ideas #2314

On my way up to the doctors for a flu jab this morning, checked the London-Brighton main line.  No trains, I’m afraid, but I saw that fall autumn has arrived in the creeper along the retaining wall.  A good model in the making?  Also, I liked the high concrete retaining wall, probably dating from Southern Railway days.  A simpler alternative to brick arches?

 

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Where is the ‘wow’ factor?

My visit to TINGS and the various forum discussions that followed provoked a certain amount of thought.  The NGF threads on the exhibition really just showed that everyone is different, and different people like different things.  So some people disliked the large N-Club modular layouts; others really liked it.

Perhaps one common thread that came out was the large number of ’roundy-roundy’ layouts, basically consisting of a through station with storage loops behind.  Of course, that description covers a wide range of layouts, including the accurate scale representation of Melton Mowbray (North), and the scratch-built diesels and electrics on Burshaw North Western.  And of course the magnificent (and enormous) ‘Fencehouses’ in 2mm finescale is basically a continuous run.  However, they do seem to get a bit ‘samey’ after a while.

There are, however, good reasons for modelling this sort of layout in ‘N’ gauge.

  • Shunting is more difficult (though very much possible) than in the larger gauges.  It’s easier to keep one’s sanity through a two-day show with a continuous layout.
  • ‘N’ gauge gives the chance to run longer trains through the countryside.  Again this is probably best expressed in a continuous layout.

Also, maybe the layouts tend to look the same due to the relative lack of RTR and kits in ‘N’ gauge.  We have been really well looked after by the trade, but it is undoubtedly easiest to model green diesels, blue diesels, or the modern railway.  You have to be something special to model pre-grouping steam.  Here the larger scales win out – there are many kits available, and scratch-building, although it seems to be getting rarer, is perhaps easier and commoner.  (Although some 2mm modellers claim that 2mm is easier than 7mm, as you can leave off most of the detail in the smaller scale.)

I then picked up a copy of October’s Railway Modeller.  Tucked near the back was the ‘Comment’ column, by John Rodway.  A couple of quotes from his article follow, though I’d recommend the whole thing.

There was always [in the 1970’s] anticipation on the way to such an event [exhibition], and so much to take in while studying the exhibits.  On the way back home I would ponder on which ideas were applicable to my own project?  How many improvements could I include and what innovations might I incorporate?

He goes on to comment that in that era, the standard of the layouts and of the models were often much lower than today, without the wide range of accurate RTR models available.  He then states….

Using just bought-in items, anyone is now able to assemble a very passable layout without recourse to craft skills honed over decades and a burgeoning box of expensive tools.

Interestingly, ‘Wenlock’ at TINGS was a GWR branch line terminal built on exactly that premise.  But it received lots of favourable comment because it was a small terminal with shunting, and was different from many other layouts.  Rodway continues….

But has this resulted in models of railways becoming more uniform?  Are they now becoming formulaic?  In its extreme form, do visitors to a show see models of the same loco running on several layouts, pulling exactly the same wagons, and carrying identical loads past repeated copies of stations houses and shops?  Is the grass invariable in its shades and textures?

The million dollar question…..

But does this sameness suggest that railway modelling has become a mature technology.

By ‘mature technology’ I mean that for any particular situation, there are a number of tried-and-tested solutions between which the practitioner has only to decide between the most appropriate for his/her particular project.

And my view of TINGS (and others too, I think) is summed up by….

Over the past few years, I’ve found it increasingly difficult to find layouts that stimulate my wow-factor.  Perhaps I’ve seen so many layouts and read so many articles that my threshold for wow-inducement has got too high?  Or conversely, has innovation and improvement flat-lined?

Perhaps this is why I often buy Model Railway Journal?  He concludes…..

I urge every modeller to strive hard to include and perfect at least one unique feature on every layout he/she builds.

How can we continue to be innovative in ‘N’ gauge without resorting to ‘jokey’ or ‘gimmicky’ layouts.  (I’m afraid that I’ll walk straight past models of railways on other planets, clever as they may be!)  I have more thoughts on this, but will leave it here for today.

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Spot the deliberate mistake

If you have ever been berated by some ‘expert’ at a show, that some part of your layout has the wrong livery, take comfort in what recently happened in real life.

To Cathay Paci(f)ic – with a large airliner…..

If you are going to get it wrong, do it in style…..

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Odd modelling idea #999

How about a train with the sliding doors open?

Jubilee Line Tube train filmed with doors wide open
Footage has emerged of a London Underground train travelling between stations with some of its doors wide open.

The Jubilee Line service had passengers on board as it travelled for one stop between Finchley Road and West Hampstead on Saturday morning.

Transport for London (TfL) said the train was “immediately taken out of service at West Hampstead and a full investigation is under way”.

Safer than ‘slam-door’ stock, eh?

While some joked on social media that it was an innovative approach to introducing air-conditioning to London’s notoriously hot underground trains, other users pointed out that the incident could have been much more serious had it occurred during rush hour, when the train would have been packed. No passengers were injured or hurt during the incident.

See more here or here.

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ESNG meeting – 19 September 2018

First, a video of last Sunday’s PlayDay. Thank you, Brian!


A quieter meeting this evening, with just the eight members turning out.  But trains were running.  A rare appearance of Japanese steam from Paul….

Together with a colourful electric locomotive…..

And an interesting European railcar from Neil, that we couldn’t work out which country it came from…..

And Mr Atfield had a variety of little tank engines to test.


 

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Believe it or not spot….

If your drivers keep going on strike, what do you do?

“SNCF targets autonomous trains in five years”

An autonomous locomotive in northern France is controlled by a “téléconducteur” at the control centre in Lyon.  Strike-hit French Railways is rapidly developing “drone trains”, with the aim of running fully-automatic services within five years – and “semi-autonomous” trains by 2020.

According to Railway Gazette, the president of the national rail operator, SNCF, wants train drivers to become more like pilots, monitoring the journey while technology optimises performance.

Perhaps there are some ideas for the UK here (no railway companies mentioned….)

Read it here and here.

 

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ESNG PlayDay – 16 September 2018

A sunny September afternoon, and a good turnout of 15 for the PlayDay.  We started rather than finished with curry, as Allan was on a 2am start milk round on Monday.  Miles did appreciate the buffet and certainly got his money’s worth….

Meanwhile, Paul brought along his Kato modules, so we had a 25′ x 9′ layout to run on…

    

Trains running included two HST units and some German steam.

 

I brought along some American stock, and this express reefer train…

 

The diesel was then replaced by a GG1 electric….

 

It was one of those afternoons.  A baggage car shed a coupling and the GG1 shed a traction tyre.  But it was still a good afternoon’s running….

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Bembridge, Isle of Wight

I keep returning to Bembridge, on the Isle of Wight, as a near perfect small branch line terminus.  A scale model fits within 4′ in ‘N’ gauge.

And with the beach directly to the left, a sea backscene would be needed.

The only difficult bit is building the little end-on-line turntable.

Terrier Loco W.9 as operating in Southern railway days, being turned at Bembridge Station
Ronald Shephard Railway Collection
West Sussex Record Office Ref No: 1/25/79

What is there not to like????

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TINGS 2018 #2

Burshaw North Western is set in BR blue days, in the north west of England.  I was pleased to see this layout at last, as I had booked it for an old ESNG show, and the builder then had to cancel as he moved north for work at short notice.  The early pre-TOPS era might not have been that auspicious for the railways, but it makes for interesting modelling.

   

More overhead electrics on the West Coast Main Line, but this time at Hatch End, at the London end of the line.  Here we have four main line BR tracks, and two underground lines.

Langston Bridge, on the Hayling Island branch, is very long and very simple, but an ideal spot to watch a succession of Terrier tank engines amble across the bridge.

Wenlock is a small BR (WR) branch terminus in the 1950’s.  Built from readily obtainable items, it shows how a realistic layout can easily be put together.

Annston again visits northern England in BR days, but this layout is an end-to-end model.

New Dalby – Research Division was one of the ‘different’ layouts on display, modelling a modern railway technical test centre, and offering a chance to run all those luminous yellow items of rolling stock.

 

Whartson Hall offers three main lines and their associated infrastructure and a chance to watch the trains go by.

 

Wickwar, modelling the early 1950’s, offered some excellent buildings and scenic modelling.

 

Another of the more ‘unusual’ layouts, Ballykeale models Irish railways at the end of the last century.

And they really are coming soon!!  Farish SECR Birdcages in full colour, and now under production, plus the C Class 0-6-0 to follow.  And expensive treat, hopefully starting later this year!

As always, I missed a number of layouts in my photographs, but I hope that I picked up many of the best ones on show.  We had a pleasant day out, helped by the relatively clear roads for the journey.  I managed to do some essential shopping (well, essential in my eyes).  This included another Dapol Terrier, and also a set of American baggage cars.  I had vowed not to add to my USA stock, but these were just too nice, and reasonably priced, to ignore.  I also came away with some more blue boxes for my stock (thanks, Jon), and some bits and pieces from N Brass.

What was unusual was that I spent most of the morning talking to old friends, and rather less looking at the layouts.  What with the ESNG members exhibiting, and a surprising number encountered wandering around the show, plus our N-Club German friends, plus all sorts of other acquaintances, and traders that I know, I seemed to have talked my way through the morning.

As for the show itself, I thought that there was plenty of very good modelling to be seen, but perhaps not as much that stood out as ‘different’ or ‘ground breaking’ as in some years.  Some shows I come away inspired (not that it has much effect).  On Saturday I came away content, but not moved to build anything.

That probably says more about my taste (or lack of it) than the modelling.  Perhaps the problem was that it is ‘TINGS’.  All ‘N’ gauge might actually be a mixed blessing, as some of the best inspiration comes from layouts in other scales – whether it’s the realism and even beauty of fine scale modelling, or the wider range of prototypes modelled in other gauges.  Perhaps ‘N’ gauge layouts have tended towards large ’roundy-roundy’ layouts, often in city outskirts.  These offer good operation potential for exhibitions, and for the sort of ‘N’ gauge stock currently available, but there may be too many of them around these days.

But will I go back next year – of course I will!

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