Long and winding road – the shed

In the mid-sixties, I was in need of the larger back bedroom in our 1930’s 3-bedroom semi, so my father invested in a SHED.  This 9′ x 8′ empire was carefully built by my father, saturated with wood preservative, insulated and lined.  The roofing felt had an added corrugated plastic layer.  This careful construction meant that the shed was still in good condition when my parents moved house over 15 years later.  Power was strung from the kitchen and garage, so one could flick a switch and pre-warm the shed with an electric convector.

Three generations of layout lived in the shed.  The first was another continuous layout, really just another ‘big station opposite small station’ design, much as we had indoors.  The next introduced a junction and a terminus in front of storage loops.  The third was the most satisfying and had most progress.  The continuous run was abandoned in favour of a simple U-shaped terminus to fiddle yard layout.  The terminus was modelled after a number of smallish Southern Railway stations.  Most track was hand-built, with some PCB sleepered Marcway points.  Ballast was in place and some basic scenery as well.  It was never finished, but it was the first ‘real’ railway I had helped build.

Through my teens and university years, my father and I were members of the Beckenham and West Wickham club.  In fact my father remained a member well into his retirement and contributed a number of models to their fine-scale ‘O’ gauge layout at that time.  I’ve posted the picture below before, but it is well worth posting again.  A typical early 70’s exhibition, with the club’s semi-coarse standard ‘O’ gauge line on display.  My father is in the middle back, and my signal box, hiding the working lever frame is middle front.  Lots of lovely Southern ‘O’ gauge (plus a couple of re-motored ‘Big-Big Train’ Hymeks).  A model railway show, so ties had to be worn (except my dad) and smoking was allowed not only in the hall, but also during operations!

BWWExpo

The BWWMRC gave me my first introduction to 2mm modelling.  In a room next to the large club library lurked what my father called, ‘The Mechanical Mice’.  2mm fine-scale modelling progressed at a slow pace.  If my memory is correct, we either had a piece of the famed Inversnecky and Drambuie Railway, or a close copy of it.  I recall the station terminus that fitted in a violin case, and the lighthouse scene next to it.  Most of this pioneering model railway can now be seen in York Railway Museum.

inversneckyfrombuffers

For those familiar with the names Willis and Cox in the context of the 2mm Association, I remember these worthy gentlemen working on the layout, together with a small American gentleman, probably called Len Fidkin, who built amazing trestles and buildings.

Then in 1973, it was off to university, and a whole set of new ideas (to say nothing of beer) opened up.  That will be for next time!

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Off my trolley – North Shore in ‘N’ gauge

I recently came across David Milburn’s layout on the web.  His layout is unusual in that it:

  • Is traction, a model of the North Shore (CNS&M) interurban out of Chicago.
  • Is in ‘N’ gauge.
  • Is British.

It’s also very, very, good, and it combines UK modelling techniques and values with a US interurban prototype.  If only I could make something almost as good….

He has developed 3-D printed models of the prototypes on display.  If you fancy a go at making one, they are available on Shapeways at the Boxcar Models shop.

Enjoy these YouTube links, together with a couple of the prototype station modelled.

(Links from the Yahoo Nscaletraction forum and YouTube).

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Long and winding road – beginnings

A while back, I posted some photos of some of my old kit and scratch built models.  Those posts didn’t include the path that I took to get from there to here.  I was thinking about this in the context of where to go next in the hobby, so it’s good to put it all down.

Like many of my generation, my interest in models started on the floor with Hornby clockwork ‘O’ gauge.  I remember a green 0-4-0 passenger engine and tender and two 4-wheeled carmine and cream BR coaches and a circle of track got me going.  My father understood real railways so a black 0-4-0 tank engine, and some goods stock followed, with some points and extra track.

I quickly developed an early appreciated the benefits of the ‘shelf layout’.  If I laid out a circular layout, I had to put it away at tea time.  If I built a straight shunting layout down one wall, it could stay there for weeks.  No brainer!  Shunting with Hornby clockwork was less than ideal, but I had hours of fun with these models.

Age 1o my father and I started out in OO.  A little 6′ x 4′ layout in the spare bedroom, using 2-rail Hornby Dublo stock but the newly released Peco Streamline track and points.  My first locomotive was O8 diesel shunter.  Still an excellent model, 50 years later.  My father didn’t really understand why I chose this model.  Perhaps it was the influence of Thomas the Tank Engine, and ‘Diesel’ in those stories.  The O8 was followed by a BR standard 2-6-4T (another lovely model that still looks good today).

Next came a larger 7′ x 5′ layout, that was not as satisfying as the smaller oval.  We considered moving the layout into the third bedroom / boxroom – it would have been about 6′ x 6′ – perfect now in ‘N’ but I think my mother may have put her foot down.  The 7′ x 5′ layout was replaced by an L-shaped terminus to fiddle yard layout, although only one leg of the L got built.  I was still able to have a lot of fun, using the three engine shed roads as my fiddle yard.

I added one more Hornby ‘locomotive’ to the roster – the 2-EPB electric unit.  No doubt I made this choice as I saw 2- and 4-EPB’s every day on the local commuter lines.  The trailer car proved very useful, in later days, as a push-pull driving carriage with a small steam locomotive.  This is one model I wish I still had – I recently saw one on Ebay selling for £800.  However, this was a collectors item – my Hornby models were well used, slightly battered, and in the case of some goods wagons, repainted in pre-nationalisation liveries.

A feature of these years was visits to ‘Hobbytime’ in West Wickham.  This was the classic Aladdin’s cave of a model shop, and the further you got back into it the more interesting the kits and bits and pieces got.  My father referred to the owner as ‘dog-face’ (I can, I think, reveal this as all parties are safely deceased) – unfair, but I suspect he’s passed his sense of humour to his son.  However, said gentlemen was a source of generally good advice, and through him we discovered Romford wheels, copper clad live-frog points, Wills kits and other essentials of the hobby at that time.

I’m sorry there are no photographs of these early efforts.  In the 1960’s there were no digital cameras, and money was short enough to think before using and developing film.  But that’s enough for today – next time, we’ll recall the ‘shed’ era…..

 

 

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Obituary – Ian Allan

I spotted this obituary in the Daily Telegraph.  In the UK and for those of my generation, Ian Allan was synonymous with train spotting books and quality transport books.  Certainly in my teens and early twenties, Ian Allen was THE transport publisher – we don’t often think how lucky we are today with so many excellent and often very specialised books.  I had plenty of both.  I got rid of my spotters guides – perhaps I shouldn’t, but all they showed was that I was too young to see much steam in day-to-day service.  I have still got some of my early Ian Allan photo albums, including my first, ‘Southern Steam’.

Reading this obituary, I learnt a lot about the man, including….

Ian Allan, who has died the day before his 93rd birthday, triggered the post-war explosion of trainspotting as a British pastime by publishing the first booklet of engine numbers in 1942 and starting a club which had 230,000 members by the time steam gave way to diesel. He diversified the business to embrace magazines, bookshops, a travel agency, a Masonic publisher, a printing business, organic garden supplies, commercial property and car dealerships…..

At 15 Ian lost a leg following a camping accident during exercises with the OTC, and this seemed to limit his career opportunities. Already a railway enthusiast (and regular visitor to the signal box at Christ’s Hospital station), he left school when war broke out to join the Southern’s staff at Waterloo. He helped to produce the company’s magazine and handle enquiries from the public – and increasingly from enthusiasts…..

Allan was 20, and a 15s-a-week clerk with the Southern Railway, when he published the ABC of Southern Railway Locomotives in response to calls from enthusiasts for information. Management declined to publish it, but allowed Allan to do so at his own risk.

The first 2,000 copies of the shilling booklet sold out in days. Further ABCs on the Great Western, LNER and LMS railways, and London buses, trams and trolleybuses, went like hot cakes, friends and neighbours helping to distribute them.

It had not occurred to Allan that “bagging” the locomotives he listed would take off as a hobby. But within weeks, knots of schoolboys armed with his booklet appeared at the end of station platforms, and in 1943 he and his colleague (and future wife) Mollie Franklin launched the Ian Allan Loco-spotters’ Club….

Spotters had to sign a pledge “not to interfere with railway working or trespass on railway property” on pain of expulsion from the club. In the deferential post-war years it was largely adhered to – though unruly scenes on Preston station in 1951 led to spotters being banned there. By 1964, however, Allan was lamenting that “mods and rockers” had infiltrated the club.

Finally, the article included this delightful picture of trainspotting, 1950 style.  It’s also an interesting socially commentary.  Look at the school uniforms.  All urchins are in uniform, and a number of schools seem to be represented.  Not so many years later, they’d all be kicking lumps out of each other, and all the caps would be thrown on the track.  A good time in some ways – but how many of these kids were living near the poverty line, with an outside toilet and a weekly bath in a tin tub?

Allan1_3359395b

Trainspotters at Newcastle Station, August 1950 (SSPL/NMeM/Daily Herald Archive)

 

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AGM and wrong kind of sun?

The ESNG AGM occurred yesterday.  A good turnout of members, and all business was concluded with no heckling and very few snores.  It’s not that the committee object to being pelted with fruit, but prefer the members to take it out the can first….

The time came for committee elections, and s ever the room went very silent and as motionless as an auction for a lost Da Vinci drawing.  Followed by a forest of hands as the committee agreed to stand again…..  Plus ça change….

Plans for Stuttgart were further advanced as Duncan brought along a new van, that although it is small, when added to Allan’s truck, will probably carry all we need for this year’s show.  It’s the N-club anniversary year, and a lot of clubs will be attending, so we will probably take a smaller layout than in previous years.  However, the resulting N-club modular layout is intended to be larger than ever before and possibly the largest in the world (possibly excepting Texas, as they are always biggest).


Last Monday First Great Western tweeted that:

“There will be no direct services from Paddington to Bourne End/Henley tomorrow due to hot weather.”

That prompted some incredulous responses on twitter. So, have our railways been defeated by the weather again? BBC transport correspondent, Richard Westcott said:

“We need to put that announcement into context.  It means a very small number of trains from Paddington won’t run direct as the points will be taken out of use to avoid them failing and causing disruption to the whole Western route. This is six trains out of several hundred that FGW operate each day.”

For the modeller, perhaps this is an excuse for the non-working point motor, and changing train services and timetable to suit?

I know that like model railways, the real thing is at risk from extreme temperatures and expansion of the rails.  Nevertheless, surely this must be classified as…..

Wrong kind of sun????

(For non-UK readers, a standing joke has been the railways blaming winter cancellations on the “wrong kind of snow”.  I believe this is the powdery kind that blows into nooks, crannies and bits of rail infrastructure that promptly stop working.)

And the BBC get into the discussion, blaming continuously welded rails.

_83973279_pa-17077467

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A charming Japanese story – and an idea for the AGM

Can you resist the newspaper headline:

“Cat stationmaster Tama mourned in Japan and elevated as goddess”

This turned out to be a charming story of Japanese culture and a railway success story:

The calico cat was appointed stationmaster at the Kishi station in western Japan in 2007 and died early last week. Now she has been mourned by company officials.

Tama the stationmaster, Japan’s feline star of a struggling local railway, was mourned by company officials and fans and elevated into a goddess at a funeral on Sunday.

The calico cat was appointed stationmaster at the Kishi station in western Japan in 2007. Donning her custom-made stationmaster’s cap, Tama quietly sat at the ticket gate welcoming and seeing off passengers. The cat quickly attracted tourists and became world-famous, contributing to the railway company and local economy…..

Wakayama Electric Railway president Mitsunobu Kojima thanked the cat for her achievement, and said Tama will be enshrined at a nearby cat shrine next month.Before Tama’s arrival, the local Kishigawa Line was near-bankrupt; and the station was unmanned as it had lost its last staff.

Mr Kojima said appointing Tama as stationmaster was initially an excuse to keep the cat at the station.  “But she was really doing her job,” he said…..

During her tenure, Tama had contributed an estimated 1.1 billion yen (£5.65 million) to the local economy, Mr Kojima said….

The cat had climbed the corporate ladder from stationmaster to “ultra-stationmaster” and vice president of the company before receiving the additional title Sunday of “honourable eternal stationmaster”.Tama will be succeeded by another calico cat, Nitama, now an apprentice stationmaster.

japan-station-cat_3357178b

Read it all in the Daily Telegraph here.

However, apart from the obvious modelling opportunity for our Japanese modellers, could this be the way forward for ESNG?  Watch out Allan – perhaps I’ll nominate our budgie for ESNG chairman at tonight’s AGM – and wait for the people and millions to pour in.  Even millions of yen would be OK.  However, I’m not going to set out the relative merits of the candidates – I may lose one, if not two, old friends.  I’d only comment that the budgie can’t make such a good cup of tea…..

snitchpost

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“This is not logical, but it is often true.”

According to Spock, anyway.  The Chairman sent me this picture, culled from Facebook. untitled “Set the phasers to stun!”

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A good ‘believe it or not’ scenic feature?

Anyone can model a car crash or lots of emergency services on their layout.  However, this would really stretch the viewers belief.

Giant circular saw blade hits car on Chongqing-Guizhou Expressway in China

From the Daily Telegraph:

Last Wednesday, Mr Xiang was driving along the Chongqing-Guizhou Expressway in central China when he noticed a giant circular saw spinning at speed towards his windscreen.

The 5ft cutting blade collided with the car bonnet, ripping through its metal engine as Mr Xiang, whose first name has not been revealed, frantically wrestled the wheel of the swerving vehicle. Miraculously, the bouncing blade missed the driver, wedging itself 50cm deep into the front of his JMC truck.  Mr Xiang defied the odds by walking away from the crash with barely a scratch on him.”I heard a ‘bang’ and then I saw all the white smoke in front of me. I almost lost control of my car,” Mr Xiang told local reporters the day after the incident, still visibly shaken up by the encounter.

Remember the vehicle is left-hand drive!  The article concludes:

Road injuries are the third-leading cause of death in China, ahead of cancers, according to a global study in The Lancet medical journal from 2013.

I’m not surprised!

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Coupling springs have sprung

This very useful tip appeared in the NRMA British Region magazine.  Most useful for those of us with Microtrains couplers, but now Dapol buckeyes are around it may also apply to them.  It was published under the wonderful title of “Tame those goldarn disappearing springs”….

NMRABR member Cliff South gave us an idea for replacing springs in Kadee couplers.

Put a fine silk thread through the middle when inserting it back in the coupler.  It cannot disappear then…..

So, where have those darned springs flown away to?  Assuming that you can find them, and I have a foot-long piece of wood with strip magnets glued along its length.  Run it over the carpet or lino and you’ll pick them up for sure…

(I hate to think WHAT I’d pick up from our carpet…)

Quite a good trick with tiny springs is to put a very small dot of superglue on just on end before fitting them….

You don’t lose them then as they are permanently attached to your fingers!

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Off my trolley – San Pedro

At the end of one line from LA and Watts were San Pedro and LA Harbour.  In the days of large ocean liners, collecting passengers from the liner and transporting them into LA generated a lot of traffic through San Pedro.

San Pedro was adjoined by a maze of PE and Southern Pacific fright yards, that lay between the depot and the harbour itself.  This old panorama gives the idea – the elegant PE depot can be seen centre left.  Note the box motor in the foreground being unloaded.

01 - View

This aerial photograph from 1952 clearly shows the depot and a couple of interurbans standing close by.  Most of the freight lines have been lifted and replaced by the inevitable car parks.

02 - 12901-1952

San Pedro depot is an attractive building and would make a good model.  These photographs show views from the town side.  Note the vintage car, cop car and bus in the colour view.  There are plenty of shots from the rail side available, but I have tried not to step on any copyright toes!

03 - 0006999 04 - San_Pedro_depot

Of course, the full San Pedro station complex might be too large for a manageable model railway.  But if we view the station from the harbour, it might just make a good N-club module.  Here’s a view from the LA end of the station, showing the interesting track layout and the street beyond.  (The depot and all the old structures have been demolished and redeveloped.  Only the multi-storey municipal building remains.)

05 - sanpedro2

And this is the sort of layout one could build.  Unfortunately most of the old valuation maps contained rail lines, but not the PE electric tracks.  At least the depot is shown and gives some scale to the drawing.  A model of the station tracks and the freight siding for box cabs would make a good pair of N-club modules.  The road width behind could be compressed a little, to allow the shops and businesses to be included as background structures.  These buildings would probably be modelled as representative structures, but there might just be room for a recognisable model of the municipal tower.

This is a very achievable PE layout – it would be simplified, but keep the character of the San Pedro location.

06 - SanPedro1921-#1927-depots

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