Farnham & District MRC exhibition – 14 October 2017 #2

Next we go north to the Settle to Carlisle line, and a model in ‘N’ of the high moorland sections of the route.  The layout represents the section of line from Blea Moor Tunnel, across the Dent Head and Arten Gill viaducts, and into Dent Station.

Also in ‘N’ was Tanners Hill, a compact layout, but recognisable as the area around New Cross in Network SouthEast days.

A favourite of mine was Merstone and Ventor West, in OOFS, and modelling the Isle of Wight in Southern Railway days.  I’d seen Merstone before, but this was, I think, the first time the pretty Ventnor West terminus had been added in its correct location at the end of the branch.  The two stations had been built by different people, and linked for the show.

The final three layouts today are industrial and colliery lines.  Denton Brook, in ‘O’, included a section of narrow gauge line, and some radio controlled lorries.

Kirkmellington, in EM, represents a small Scottish colliery.

And finally Ackthorpe, in ‘OO’, is a larger establishment, based on West Yorkshire in steam days.  There’s something fascinating in small industrial steam locomotives shuffling endless lines of mineral wagons….

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Farnham & District MRC exhibition – 14 October 2017

Last Saturday’s show visit was to the Farnham & District MRC.  This also had the 2mm Scale Association AGM going on, so there was a selection of 2mm finescale layouts on display.  So this post is a 2mm special.  The 2mm layouts were situated together in the entrance lobby, making a fine advert for the scale.

Lighterman’s Yard is a small fictitious goods yard set somewhere in SE London.  The scenery, buildings, and backscene are wonderfully suggestive of London Bridge and Bricklayer’s Arms, and look very familiar to me.

The layout plan is an Iain Rice one, that has always been a favourite of mine.  It has been transposed south of the Thames from the Great Eastern to the South Eastern.  And it is living proof that it is possible to build a Rice plan!

Burnham-on Sea is a model of the northern terminus of the Somerset and Dorset Railway.  It’s quite a historic model, as the layout itself was built by the late Denys Brownlee – who built exquisite small S&D locomotives – and after years of storage is now being rejuvenating for some more years service.

Mark Fielder is an exponent of Nn3 – 3′ narrow gauge to a reasonable fine scale.  The Pizza was a ‘proof of concept’ layout to see if Nn3 would work.  An Clar is a slice of rural Ireland – check out the wonderful backscene – but anything can be seen running.  Definitely a scale gauge combination for people with good eyesight!

‘Wadebridge’ is a slightly compressed model of the Southern Railway station in North Cornwall at the far west of the Southern empire.  It’s part of a larger home layout of the North Cornwall line, and is full of beautiful models.  There’s a thread describing it on RMweb somewhere.  And yes, that 2-4-0T Beattie Well Tank does work…..

More layouts from the larger scales next time.

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ESNG meeting – 18 October 2017

A quiet evening again, with just 5 of us there, plus prospective new member Steve, and Ian, who just dropped in at the start to pay his annual subscription, before going back to work.  Mr Atfield is still somewhere in Portugal, and the Cha(I)rman was under the weather.

But we got a small circuit up and running, and it was full of trains, thanks to Paul, Graham and John.  And there was plenty of time to talk…..


Also, Duncan sent me this layout – better than Paul’s goods train on club nights.  And if you’ve got a helix like this, who needs a layout?


And ex-member Ray Anderson sent me this one.  Perhaps one could do something similar with an over-wide Farish O8 and the station platform?

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Links for the middle of the week

I’ve got a set of photos to post from the excellent Farnham show, but that will have to wait till later in the week.  For now, here are some of the links that I’ve come across recently.

If you are an American modeller, I’d recommend Spookshow.net.  Reviews of almost every USA ‘N’ gauge product ever made, and all rated from A (Looks and runs great. Smooth, quiet and accurate to the prototype. Worthy of any operational fleet. State of the art) to F (Complete piece of junk. Can’t complete a simple loop without stalling or derailing. Looks like crap with coarse, oversized and/or moulded on details. Prototype? What prototype?).  Also some interesting blogs and information on brass gears.  If you are a UK modeller looking for a suitable chassis for a project, this may also be of interest to you.

Next, ‘Is Europe’s ghostliest train station about to rise again?’, from the BBC.  A fascinating article on the remote, barely used, and gigantic station on the France-Spain border.

When they built the station at Canfranc, it was on a grand scale and with no expense spared. It had to be bold and modern – an architect’s dream come true, built in iron and glass, complete with a hospital, restaurant and living quarters for customs officers from both France and Spain.

An ‘N’ gauge model is actually available, hand-made for a large sum….

But the UK has some wonderful railway stations, too.  ‘Britain’s 18 most beautiful railway stations’ is from the Daily Telegraph website.  Redhill is conspicuous by its absence, but here is Liverpool Street….

And finally, stuck for road names in your scenic village.  Read ”Dumb Womans Lane’ and ‘Titty Ho’: The streets where it’s four times harder for owners to sell their homes’ in the Daily Telegraph.

Homeowners living on a road with a rude, silly or controversial street name are four times less likely to sell their property compared to those living on neighouring streets, new research suggests.  Britain’s rudest roads include the likes of Crotch Crescent in Oxford, Dumb Womans Lane in Rye, Spanker Lane in Belper and Backside Lane in Doncaster.

But it’s not all bad news…..

Not all of the streets have suffered such dismal house sales, however. Crotch Crescent has seen 15pc more homes sell than nearby Derwent Avenue, while there are 34pc more property sales on Titty Ho than on neighbouring Wellington Road.

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Jon’s modules – fettling Aldersford

We’ve been meaning to carry out some maintenance on Aldersford, our late President Martin’s N-club modules, based on the Southern Railway station at Ford.  The boards had warped, making running at last year’s ESNG show a little unreliable.  With a little more time on my hands, I foolishly offered to have a go at improving running, so the layout would be more reliable at Stuttgart.

The other catch with the boards was that they needed their own power, as there were 11 switches to operate points, sections, and lights, with a forest of wiring underneath the boards.  This would have allowed a train to reverse in the station bay platform.  But we didn’t understand what the switches did, and operation was by trial and error.  And we had only ever ran trains straight though the station.  So I decided to solder the points to be set to the main line, and replace all the wiring with a simple N-club ‘bus’ from one end to the other.

First job on the small board of the two, was to strip out the wiring that was in the way, and screw a ply and stripwood girder into place along the track centre line.  This more-or-less flattened out the worst dip in the trackwork.  Wiring and plugs were fitted to provide continuity through the module.

However, one track still undulated too much for comfort, and the point was high – possibly as it was a Peco code 80 point linked to code 55 trackwork.  So I did a swift PW job and lifted all of one track.

A new code 55 point and track more or less flattened things out.  The new track was reballasted in due course.

So to the second, long board.  Once again, most wiring was removed, just leaving the lighting bus down the middle of the module.

After a couple of false starts, I opted to use aluminium angle to flatten out the bumps in the board.  Fortunately, this one wasn’t as bad as the short board, and although I couldn’t quite get all the gradients out, it’s a lot, lot, better.

I then had to relay the point on the right and replace the track at the edge of the board.  There’s still a little bump at the join, but it’s a whole lot flatter than it was before.

And a ‘first’ train successfully run end to end on both tracks!

Well, it’s far from perfect, but should run a lot better at Stuttgart and the next ESNG show.  I still need to sort the lights (on the platform and in buildings) out.  These had their own transformer, and frankly, we never used them.  I will fit an AA battery pack under each board, so the lights can run without exterior power.  Still, I think that’s a project to complete by the April show.

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ESNG meeting – PlayDay 8 October 2017

A surfeit of pictures this week – well at least it cuts my pontificating…..

Some club meetings just seem to go very well indeed.  Sunday’s PlayDay was a very pleasant afternoon, and 10 of us had a very sociable afternoon with plenty of trains running, and plenty of conversation.

The fiddle yard had plenty of stock in place, despite missing the Japanese connection with Paul exhibiting at the Croydon show.

Dave’s canal basin has had some detail added including these delightful canal barges.

Sean was testing a new (to him) train, a German ‘tunnel rescue train’.  The prototype has an engine on each end, and loads of rescue equipment in the wagons, and even a hospital car.

Brian ran this lovely Merchant Navy Pacific, and less elegant, but always interesting, Q1 0-6-0.  The Q1 ran like a watch – it seems to be a model where you get a good one or a bad one!

Phil’s Pannier tank wasn’t overloaded!

Allan gave his EWS coal train another run…

I had a Class 33 and a rake of Maunsell coaches plus a couple of utility vans.  It ran smoothly on-and-off for most of the afternoon.  I’m not sure whether the first 33’s ever pulled these coaches, but it looks the part.

ERIC was on display, but this time as a closed depot??

We were missing Paul, but Simon tried for the American equivalent of the monster goods train.  Not as long, but it ran pretty well!

And here’s Brian’s video of the afternoon – showing how a good camera takes better photos and film than my phone….

And it ended with a curry – a good end to a good afternoon.

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Croydon MRS show 2017 #2

Another old favourite worth seeing again was The Glyn Valley Tramway, an 009 model of Glynceiriog, the passenger terminus of the line that then continued to the slate quarries.  Lots of excellent detail, but it can’t be the slate area of Wales – it’s not grey and raining!

Ian Milroy has obviously been busy!  El Ferrocarril San Maria Gandia is a freelance layout set (can you guess from the name) in Spain, but is closely based on a number of real locations.  It includes HO, HOe narrow gauge, and working road vehicles.  The model includes a single carriageway 1km tunnel where road and rail share the same bore.  Yes, it existed, and the accident rate must have been high!  Excellent modelling and I shall look forward to seeing this one again.

Oak Lane TMD in ‘OO’ could best be described as a noisy layout.  All those sound equipped diesels ticking over….

Sandford and Banwell, in 4mm P4, is loosely based on the eponymous station on the GWR Cheddar Valley line in North Somerset.

Another exhibition regular is the Slindon Vale Railway, in 7mm narrow gauge.  Lots of good cameo scene and detail, and always worth another look.

Also in 7mm narrow gauge, is St Mary’s, based on the Welshpool and Llanfair.

And last but not least, German ‘O’ gauge, with Hochstadt, owned by my old friend John ‘Bill’ Bishop.  We were both members of the Beckenham and West Wickham club in the 1960’s (John is still a member), and are both still playing trains!

That’s Croydon….  It’s a busy few weeks up to follow.  Next week Farnham, then Uckfield, then the Beckenham and West Wickham show, then the weekend exhibiting with the West Sussex Group.  A lot of late passes needed!

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Croydon MRS show 2017 #1

Having successfully differentiated Farnham from Fareham, it was off to the Croydon MRS exhibition at Warlingham.  It was a very good show, with some excellent layouts, perhaps spoilt in places by poor lighting.  BH Enterprises were in a very dim spot, and were considering issuing miner’s helmets to peruse their stock.  At least the lighting would have allowed Bob to doze off unnoticed…..

In these two posts I’ll work up the scales, starting with ‘N’.  Atlantic Road has become a bit of a local regular, but always worth a look.  A good variety of trains running in location that ‘oozes’ South (or should it be ‘Sarth‘ Sarf’) London.

Banbury is a fine model of the prototype station but it was a little monochrome when I passed by, with prototypical masses of DMUs on display.  The interesting part of the timetable came later.  Banbury station brings back memories of how we analysed the flooding in Banbury by comparing pictures of the station in 1998 and the 1930’s.  The levels of flooding (close to platform level) were similar, and showed that the 1998 floods weren’t as rare as everyone was claiming!

Hookhills Viaduct just models the viaduct that is on the line from Newton Abbott to Kingswear, and the period is set to be 1961/2.

Willmich am Rhein models a stretch of DB line between two tunnels running parallel to the Rhine.  A chance to just watch the trains go by, and, for the builders, bring a favourite holiday spot home with you.

Good to see Southbridge again.  Modelling the GWR 1934-48, the eagle-eyed would have spotted the new Farish Castle on expresses.  To me, this is the acceptable end of GWR modelling….

Paul had his Kato Racetrack on display, in a bigger and better format.  However, no-one gave him any tables and he was running late with the setup.  Fortunately, by the time I left, trains were on the move.

Moving up to TT, or to be more accurate, 3mm scale, Whatlington models a real location but imaginary railway in Sussex.  Here, a Class 33 is doing a little gentle shunting.

The other 3mm layout was Hemyock, a model of the Culm Valley line in GWR days.  Hemyock is almost the perfect branch line terminus, being well appointed with locomotive, carriage and goods sheds.  It features an impressive dairy beyond the terminus proper, that kept the line open till 1975.

Next post, we’ll move up the scales!

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ESNG meeting – 5 October 2017

Not a bad turn-out on Thursday, and plenty running for much of the evening – then at 9:15pm, everyone put their trains away, and the hall emptied.  So I got my trains out and running…..

Paul was celebrating a new flat in Redhill by running yet another bullet train….

This model of a Japanese Art Gallery train (I think) is nothing less than exquisite…..

Allan was running his EWS coal train.  It’s now just another bit of railway history…..

The flashing tail lamp was most effective.  All done with a little battery under the coal.

I was running in a Class 24, that ran well from the box.

And then gave it 16 vans to pull…..

The bogie brake was a bit OTT for this train, but I do like them!

So to Sunday, and an extra PlayDay to make up for the one we missed for TINGS.  Tomorrow I was going to go to the Farnham exhibition, but I realised that was next week, and it’s Fareham tomorrow.  So perhaps I’ll go to Croydon MRS instead, especially as Paul is exhibiting his Kato racetrack again, in a bigger and better form.

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Odd or even?

This is a question I’ve heard discussed before – does a train look better with an odd or even number of coaches/wagons?  (Note: American readers modelling mile long double-stacks, please move on now – you will have lost count long before the end of the train.  Or should you debate the number of locomotives – does A-B-B-A look better than A-B-A?)

There has been some recent discussion on N Gauge Forum of this old chestnut…

I’m told that an odd number of wagons always looks better than an even number, for some reason. You should get another one!

Run two trains – 13 in one, 11 in the other (other number combinations are available.)

I realise that this is totally off topic, but a lot of things consist of an odd number. More car wheels have an odd number of ‘spokes’ than have an even number, a lot of stairs consist of 13 steps.

I agree that often an odd number of wagons looks better than an even number, and have wondered why.  My theory is that an even number of wagons can be easily “bisected” by the eye, and broken down into smaller numbers, but this is harder to do with uneven numbers.

I think the thing is, if you have 4 vans together in a train of otherwise low wagons, it looks wrong, but if you have 3, its OK – the other one can be a bit further up the train. Supposedly.

And this interesting (if rather arty) website.

Why Are Odd Numbers So Visually Appealing?

Despite what any of your playground foes may have told you in grade school, being odd is actually a good thing. Odd numbers – and the number three, specifically – have long been heralded by designers and stylists as magical numbers that should be applied to interiors and vignettes to make them look even better. But better how?

Odd Numbers Create Visual Interest – Even numbers create symmetry, but odd numbers create interest. An odd number of details is more effective at capturing your gaze. Odd numbers force your eyes to move around the grouping–and by extension, the room. That forced movement is the heart of visual interest. It’s for that reason that a set of three is more appealing and memorable than something paired off in two’s.

And the answer – in the UK it probably comes down to how much room you have for your layout.  But modelling the Southern Railway/Region, Maunsell  and Bullied coaches were often in 3-sets, so three coaches plus a luggage van would be a quick answer.  And for much of the Atlantic Coast Express, a single brake-composite was dropped off in places – is one an odd number??

Here we see the Wisbech and Upwell again – with three wagons, plus a brake van.  Is this better than four wagons and the brake van?  Does the brake van count?  It certainly seems more visually satisfying to have wagon-van-wagon-brake than wagon-wagon-van-brake.  Did the railways deliberately shunt odd numbers of wagons in a train and leave the last one till tomorrow (especially if carrying urgent goods)?  Surely, making money is less important than aesthetics???

Of course, Rule 1 applies….

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