Training for Valentine’s Day

I hope you remembered Valentine’s Day for your significant other.  If only to cover up the true love of your life….

Love of trains is not restricted to us anoraks….

Although some people may not love trains for quite the same reason….

However, there is always someone trying to make something out of our affection for the railways….

Covering up the real state of their train service….

So the real message is….

And just to confirm that I’m really a romantic at heart, this evening I’m taking Mrs B. to Reigate to see a live feed of Twelfth Night, transmitted from the Royal Shakespeare Company in Stratford.   Sort of going to the theatre at the movies.  It’s a surprise, but I told my younger daughter, who merely commented, “Bet she goes to sleep….”


P.S. It was excellent, and she didn’t.

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On my workbench #6

Some more progress with buildings for the first module.

These two half-relief row houses are Walther’s kits.  The left hand one was salvaged from Earl’s Wood.  The right hand one is new, but the kit has been ‘in stock’ since I built the first one 10 years ago.  These models go together very easily, and I built the new one in a couple of evenings – one to pre-paint most of the parts and one to put them together.  A little weathering is, again, needed, but they then will be turned through 180 degrees to form a background to the modules.

Walther’s kits are excellent, but perhaps predictable, as they are so widely used.  The Rix bridge is even commoner, I guess, but every self respecting USA layout should have one!  Again, an easy build, with the piers spaced to suit the tracks already laid.  I was pleased that the three bridge kits used come to about 390mm in width, whilst the baseboard is 400mm wide.  This allows a small gap to be left on each side.  Perhaps not ideal scenically, but it will allow the module to be boxed without wrecking the scenery.

The road traffic on the bridge was again salvaged from Earl’s Wood.  The picture below shows the bridge around its final position on the module.


And an unusual modelling idea – no trains due to balloons!  The BBC reported , with absolutely appropriate alliteration….

Bunch of balloons in Billericay halts trains in their tracks

Rush-hour trains were disrupted for more than two hours by a bunch of balloons tangled on overhead lines.  Commuters using Greater Anglia services were delayed in the Billericay area of Essex when about 50 yellow and black balloons got stuck.

One commuter said his driver announced a “party balloon” was to blame.  Asked why a train could not plough through balloons, Greater Anglia said they could damage the train. Network Rail engineers removed them.

Disruption to trains started just after 08:00 GMT on Friday and lasted until 10:35.

Photo: Greater Anglia

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ESNG turns 21 – the evidence?

East Surrey N Gauge is 21 this year, and we thought this auspicious date should be marked in some way.  So this week Derek delivered a large cardboard box to me….

The contents were a 100 off for a Dapol special commission of their gunpowder wagon.  This follows on from the Hall & co coal wagon that we produced a few years ago…..

And here’s the little wagon close up – too close for my phone and I can assure you that the lettering is not at all blurred!  It has the club letters, and is numbered 21.  I like the ‘Return to Redhill’ lettering on the doors.  It did occur to us, that if this batch sells out, we can do another one numbered 25 for the appropriate year…

We’ll be selling these at the 2018 show for the give-away price of £10.  Members have first call though, at a reduced price.  (No Neil, you can’t buy 99 and put them all on Ebay…. )

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Linx

I’d hoped to report more workbench progress today, but work has been delayed by the timber yard losing my order, and my plastic filler going solid (well, it probably was 10 years old.)  So a couple of links from Model Railroad Hobbyist will have to do instead!


Firstly, Model Railroading and the Suspension of disbelief  An interesting exploration of models as art and models for operation…..

There has been a lot of arguing discussion lately about the merits of two attitudes, which at the extremes can be summarized as “It must be beautiful even if it has nowhere to go” vs. “I don’t care what it looks like as long as the trains are on time”. Everyone seems to have staked out a spot along that line, and many are vociferous in the defence of their position.

Personally, I am probably closer to the art end, but I feel all approaches are valid and potentially fun. I also have no illusions that either approach is particularly “real”. Ops can not be fully prototypical unless you are getting a paycheck and working in 10 below weather; the most perfect model cannot escape the fact it is 10″ long. To get either, you would have to buy a railroad (I know where there’s one for sale). The prototype is an inspiration which you can follow with any degree of rigor.

The enjoyment of model railroading depends on the suspension of disbelief. A 2 year old pushing wooden cars along router shaped track has no conflict with reality– this is just fun to do. Eventually, a child learns to associate this toy with something in the real world–maybe by train rides, maybe by Thomas on television. She knows she is playing with a toy, but at the same time, she is using her imagination to populate the world with everything that is missing– scenery, freight and people, among other things. As we grow older, the gap between the toy and known reality widens. It becomes more difficult to believe in the world of the toy. One way to reinforce the belief is to make the toy more “realistic”. Put it on a track that may only go in a circle but populates the field of vision with things that do not flatly contradict the imaginary world. Another way is to develop a stronger imagination– to focus not on the visual world, but on the action of the participants. You have already figured out where each path can lead.

There are benefits and disadvantages in both approaches.

After some discussion, he concludes….

Of course, the ideal layout provides both. The most elaborate prairie can grow scenery, or at least the plywood can be painted and the tools picked up. Even ProtoXX track allows the movement of trains, and it only takes a little extra planning to make this movement purposeful, even if that is just to stop for passengers every other time around.

So, what have you done (or plan) to strike a balance between art and ops? What can you not disbelieve?

Worth a read, though this hasn’t generated as much comment as seemed likely!


We often complain about the quality of the models we buy, and the service that we receive from supplier and manufacturers.  It’s comforting to know that the USA is little different…

Maybe Your Products Suck

Questioning the quality of today’s models

This is not an apology.

Recently there has been a trend of commentary criticizing the nastier members of our hobby. You know the type: they are grumpy, they are never happy with your scratch-built model, your rivets are off, your colours are incorrect, your models are 1 scale inch too big.

While not representative of the majority, they are a loud turn-off for newcomers to the hobby.

MRH had an editorial discussing just how non-beneficial this is to newer members. One of Rapido’s most recent newsletters responded to scathing criticism that its products are made in China. True Line Train’s website has tongue-in-cheek commentary under the photos of new products that seems to pre-emptively attack would-be attackers.
And watch any video on model railroading and the host will often disclaim himself that whatever technique they’re demonstrating is not the be-all and end-all, but just a method that works for them.

It sounds like everyone is a victim of these rude individuals. Boo hoo.

It turns out that, despite my criticism, I am one of these rowdy fools. Let me explain…..

Read on here.  The six pages of comments are interesting.  There’s a manufacturer’s response, plus a lot of complaint about Quality Control.  Now doesn’t that sound like the UK?

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Odd modelling ideas #0219

A few more ideas.  Unusual wagon loads are popular enough, but how about an old, or damaged, wagon or locomotive going to the scrapyard?  These are all American pictures.  I looked hard for some UK equivalents, but couldn’t find any.  Maybe our smaller loading gauge prevents this?  Anyhow, it might make good use of some damaged or failed model.

Of course, ESNG has already done this, sending Thomas to the scrapheap…

 

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ESNG meeting – 1 February 2018

A busy evening with a round dozen members attending (some more round than others.)Unfortunately we were still missing the Cha(I)rman’s tea making expertise.  But the usual suspects were soon filling the fiddleyard.

Derek brought along his Kato Kowloon Canton Railway set.  I have happy memories of seeing these in the 1990’s, often being overtaken by (or overtaking) one of these whilst driving up the Tolo Highway in Hong Kong.  The trains of PRC stock that ran some of the other cross-border trains were perhaps more interesting, but these push-pull units, with a loco on each end, were very stylish.

Here’s a single set of carriages running in through the northern new Territories.

I hadn’t noticed that Bachmann had produced this special edition KCR WD 2-8-0 in ‘OO’.  Please could we have a ‘N’ gauge one?

Peter was running (amongst other things) this lovely Spanish loco.  The shop grey livery no doubt didn’t last very long.

Simon’s Santa Fe (ex-Norfolk & Western) Y4 looked good, and with built in DC sound, has a large enough tender for two loudspeakers and some pretty good sound effects.   A train of Paul’s Japanese tank wagons is parked behind.

Once again the layout displayed the diverse taste of the members.  I didn’t get a shot of the Gatwick Express (it can be seen in the second photograph) and other UK DMUs that got a run out through the evening.  I suspect that the only ‘club layout’ that we could ever build would be an international railway museum…..

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Odd modelling ideas #0218

Here’s a little Swiss spiral for the Cha(I)rman.  It would make quite some model….


I liked this film from YouTube, describing the winter of 1963.

I can’t remember seeing trains in Petts Wood that winter, but here are a couple of my old shots of our home.  Thank goodness for global warming…..


And finally, I couldn’t resist this photograph from RMweb.  It cries out to be modelled…..  I also recall my encounters with urban elephants in Bangkok, especially the one that visited Cheap Charlie’s bar for his daily tipple – bought by us punters with a tip for the elephant’s handler….

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On my workbench #5

More gentle progress – the first two buildings for the modules.  One a Walther’s plastic kit, the other a wood craftsman kit of an ice house.  The photograph is, of course, cruel!  A little touching up of the ice house is needed, and the storage shed looks a bit lurid, and a little weathering is needed.  I’ve tried to leave the doors as poorly painted and faded, but they look better to the eye than to the camera.  The trouble is, it takes a lot of skill to make something look badly painted, rather than just being badly painted.

Next project will be a Rix overbridge for one end of the layout.


And a couple of links to finish the month….

Scenic inspiration with “Drone image of train stuck in landslip in Highlands“.  Just the thing if you prefer scenery to operation….

And an update on the Ashford International Model Railway Excellence Centre.  Looks like it’s moving forward despite problems.  And interesting to see Jools Holland as a supporter, as well as Roger Daltrey.

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Minories #4 – another almost Minories…..

The posts that I put together at the beginning of last year have been some of the most read since I started blogging – showing the enduring interest in Cyril Freezer’s original design.  Browsing RMweb, and then ambling around the Library of Scotland georeferenced maps, I came across another ‘almost’ Minories – Greenwich Park.

Here’s the track plan, with a six foot scale in ‘N’ shown on the plan.  Not quite a Minories, as no reverse curves into the platforms, but with a locomotive release road between the two main platforms.  And suitably complex point work, with two 3-way points and a scissors crossover.  Unlike Ludgate Hill, this could probably be put together from standard Peco code 55 items.

Perhaps one could add an extra siding – maybe a kickback under Burney Street for parcels or milk, but even in this form, the station would make an excellent model.  Parcels could still be delivered to one of the platforms outside the rush hour (not that Greenwich Park ever had a rush hour.)

The real thing didn’t last long – it was closed in 1919, as traffic was not as good as the LC&DR expected (seems to be a common story!)  The Disused Station site has all the details:

Greenwich Park was built on a curve with three platform faces, a side platform and an island; for much of their length the platforms were covered by awnings. There was also a central road between the platforms which allowed locomotives to be detached from incoming trains and run-round ready for departure. A water crane was sited at the London end of the island and a siding for spare engines lay behind the signal box.

The substantial brick entrance building was on the west side of Stockwell Road; it included the booking hall, a buffet, together and ladies’ rooms for both first and second-class passengers. There was a canopy at the front of the building and a two-storey stationmaster’s house alongside. At the rear of the building there was a small covered concourse giving access to the platforms.

The station was initially called Greenwich but after the amalgamation of the LCDR and SER in 1899 it was renamed Greenwich Park in 1900 to avoid with the SER’s Greenwich Station.

There are a number of photographs on the site.  Again, the plan is almost a perfect Minories, hiding in a cutting.  A flavour of the station can be seen below.  I’m surprised that no-one (as far as I know) has built this design.  It would be perfect for pre-grouping trains of any of the London companies, but would make a compact design even for SR EMU’s into the British Railways era.

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More links and oddities

First, a cure for insomnia…..

“Slow train coming: SBS to air 17-hour Ghan trip on Sunday”

Following the success/controversy of airing a three-hour extract of a train trip through the Australian outback, SBS has decided to air a 17-hour version of the journey on Sunday.  Marketed as Australia’s first foray into the Norwegian genre of slow TV, the program showed – without ad breaks – a driver’s seat view of the famous passenger train on its 3,000km trip from Adelaide to Darwin.

Due to its popularity, SBS station Viceland will air the uninterrupted 17 hours from 2.40am on Sunday.  The three hour version “got the nation talking, trending nationally on social media, and recorded an average of 583,000 viewers in metro and regional markets throughout the three hour program, making this the highest performing SBS program in the past 12 months,” SBS said to explain the novel programming decision.  The vision of outback scenery and train tracks was accompanied by text explaining the local history of each new area – with a focus on Indigenous history and early European, Chinese and Afghan immigrants.

Even the 17-hour clip is an edited version. The actual journey of the Ghan goes for 54 hours and is the world’s longest passenger train, stopping at Alice Springs and Katherine over the course of three days before arriving at Darwin.

Better (just) than those nature programs with closeups of flies crawling up a wall.  Also read about viewer reactions here.  I suppose you might get some ideas for layout scenery!

Closer to home, I saw this YouTube film of the Bern line and tunnels.  High quality viewing, and only an hour long.  There are a string of other videos, and look to be worth a look, especially if you model that part of Europe.

And finally, one for the real anoraks in our midst.  How about road-gritter spotting?  Yes, it seems to be catching on in Scotland.  The BBC reports:

Where’s Sir Andy Flurry? Keeping track of Scotland’s gritters

Scotland has a set of surprise heroes – in the form of road gritters.  Thanks to social media, Transport Scotland’s fleet of light-flashing, salt-spraying kings of the road have become a bit of a sensation.

Followers have been glued to their screens following the roads authority’s Gritter Tracker.  They were surprised to find out the vehicles had humorous names like Sir Andy Flurry, Sir Salter Scott and Gritty Gritty Bang Bang.

The force was with the people of Ayrshire during Tuesday’s snow flurries, their roads were being protected by Luke Snowalker.

Whatever next – a collection of manhole covers?

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