Stuttgart 2014 #4 – N-Club modules

Today, just a few photographs of the many N-club modules that were on display.  A reminder – here’s the end board of the N-club module – the module can be of any length or indeed radius.

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This enormous station layout is a regular at the Stuttgart show.  Every year that goes by seems to have more detail added.  The combination of a scale length main line station, complex trackwork, and finely detailed buildings – and trams – takes a lot of beating.

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This extensive loco shed is also a regular on display.  One can see the potential of a modular layout – this shed would make a reasonable stand-alone home layout, but can be linked up with other peoples boards for a big show.

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This flying junction wouldn’t fit in so well at home.  The young operators are looking for the next train.  Behind you…..

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The ‘helix’ is always a focal point of the show.  Two of these modules raise the running lines above head height, and enable the public to get ‘inside’ the modular layout, or just to form a main corridor through the layouts.  It is also the focus of attention when a train gets stuck or derails near the top, requiring a step ladder and stopping all running for a while.  At least this year there were no breakaways coming back down the spiral at ever increasing speed.

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Feeling a little blue?  just about everything was lit, from floodlights to car lights on this module.

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I liked this shed with overhead catenary.  A very attractive building, and the locomotive nearest the camera was programmed to shuttle in and out of the shed.  It would also make a good interurban shed…..

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The more one looked, the more good modelling could be found.  Here we have interesting bridges, buildings and a harbour, and some N-gauge vines and vegetables.

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And of course, railways are meant to carry essential supplies.  Peanuts into the UK, Imperial Mints out.  No wonder we have a deficit….

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Stuttgart 2014 #3 – ESNG at play

ESNG ran our usual four track N-mod circuit for the four days of the show.  It was linked to the main N-club double track modular layout by a pair of junctions.  This allowed the inner three tracks to run our own stock, but the outer track received (and sent back) stock from Europe (no UKIP here!)  However, running the outer junction from Europe was the most stressful job for the operators.  Occasionally, three or four trains were coming from all directions, sometimes accompanied by the train owner telling you where to send it.  Being the gentlemen that we are in ESNG, we refrained from the obvious answer….

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Looking down the exhibition hall, one gets an impression of its size.  We were missing a few railway trade stands, as the Stuttgart show this year clashed with that at Cologne.  This was probably a good thing, otherwise Neil would have spent even more money.  As it was, the shelves were looking a little bare by Sunday.  Our cameraman has also caught the ESNG members in their natural habitat.  Sometimes, the little fellows act very shy, hiding from the camera and making strange hand gestures (with apologies to David Attenborough.)

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ERIC went PW this year.  We always try to ‘theme’ ERIC the roundhouse, and this year permanent way stock was on display.  I enjoyed running my Delaware and Hudson PA1 and a rake of seven streamliner coaches.  The Deltic also looks good!

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Raysden is always worth a look.  The GWR railcars automatically shuttled back and forth for four days on the branch line without a hitch.

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Derek’s Union Street was back on display this year, with a real London Underground train on the subterranean subway line.  Corgi produced a model close to N gauge for the London Olympics, that was quickly motorised by Derek.  They had a little trouble with the disco in the railway arches – due to the hall voltage drop, the light show was green only – perhaps it was zombie night?

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Duncan’s ‘Westminster’ graced the T-track circuit for another year.  Try counting the rush hour commuters….

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Finally, the chairman was in a destructive mood.  He opened our access gate when Thomas was hiding in the tunnel and he popped out on a one way trip to a concrete floor (Thomas, not the chairman).  Thomas RIP.  Frighteningly, we then began to observe a pattern, when the chairman repeated the trick with the Harry Potter Hogwarts express.  Fortunately, a little magic from Harry (and Derek) got the train running again.

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Stuttgart 2014 #2 – The Bartlett’s have landed!

For the next week or so I will blog through the Stuttgart show.  I’m wasn’t quite clever enough to ‘live-blog’ it all, so I’ve come back with a load of photographs, and I’ll post a few chosen ones.

Maxine and I arrived in Stuttgart about 16:30 on the Friday, after a simple journey from Redhill, thanks to the delights of ‘Germanwings’.  We moved hotel this year to the ‘Wyndham’, that is 5 minutes walk from the airport and 5 minutes walk from the Messe where the exhibition was being held.  Having checked in, we walked across to the Messe, where most of the punters were leaving – the halls are open from 10:00 to 18:00.  We arrived to greet the ESNG team, and immediately turned around and left – with everyone else I hasten to add.  First for the N-club group photograph.  This reminded me of wedding photographs as it did go on a bit and they lost all the required important people at the critical moment.

Then we headed for the S-Bahn train station to catch a smart red DB train towards the city centre.

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We had been invited to visit a Stuttgart model railway club, the Modelleisenbahn Stuttgart.  Fortunately, our German friends do abbreviation – MECS is a lot less of a mouthful!  On arriving at the appropriate S-Bahn station, one follows an exit corridor, and enters this rather anonymous door.  Once inside, there is an extensive clubroom, in the area above the station escalators and tracks.

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The club layout is an extensive and operationally intensive HO layout, with a long main line and a single track branch off.  Much of the layout is complete, but some new areas are still under development.  I noted the two layers of storage sidings/staging under the layout, accessed by a helix.  The helix is a common device in the USA to move between layout levels, but we rarely have enough room for this in the UK.

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Whilst visiting, we were well looked after by MECS and fed and watered in a small club dining room.  Although the layout was HO, there were several tables of N gauge stock for sale.  I resisted a ‘Flying Hamburger’, despite a very good price (I do this every year at Stuttgart – they are very attractive early DMU’s, but there is no way I need one).  Derek and Allan were less restrained and waded in, and Allan spotted the Swiss luggage van that he has been hunting for two or three years for President Martin.  This was snaffled very quickly, and made a good evening even better.  We were amused to see one of the traders from the Messe show buying up some stock, no doubt for sale at a profit the next day.

Then it was back on the train and a short walk to the hotel.  Next post I’ll get into the Messe itself.

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Some interesting (non-Stuttgart) photographs

Two links I came across recently.

The Daily Telegraph has a picture gallery of women at work on the railways during WW1.  Interesting stuff, and some good photos of London termini, and also of Horwich works, with its own narrow gauge (18″?) line around the works.

These photographs come from the Science and Society Picture Library .  This is a mine of information and photographs, representing the visual collections of the Science Museum, Media Museum, National Railway Museum and Museum of Science & Industry.  Pictures may be downloaded for private use, but not reproduced – so no pictures in this post.  Good for a browse and liable to slow one’s modelling…..

 

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Stuttgart 2014 #1 – Set up day

Well, I haven’t got there yet, but here are some photographs from Allan, taken on Wednesday during the show set up day.  It never fails to amaze me how any model railway show comes together, when an empty hall and load of bits of railway are transformed into a high quality show.  And even more so when the empty hall is this big.

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Jon’s modules – Progress?

It’s been a while (again) since I reported progress on my N-Club modules.  And the main reason for this is that there has been little progress.  A new central heating boiler and some tidying up meant that the loft room had been filled with ‘stuff’ and it has been almost impossible to work up there.

However, I got to grips with the room last weekend.  An old chest of drawers went to the tip, making space for the bookcase cabinet that had been taking my working space.  The contents of the drawers (all railway items) went into the cabinet.  A number of bags of clothes were moved back into bedrooms.  And it looks a whole lot better!

Now to get to work.  I realise that the next ESNG exhibition in April is not so far away, and I want to exhibit the modules, even in an unfinished state.  So this is my job list:

  1. Complete main line wiring (the branch can remain unwired if necessary)
  2. Build two end loop boards, lay track and wire
  3. Paint track and baseboards (ballasting may be too long a job)
  4. Make some mock-up buildings (based on the laser-cut kit drawings)
  5. If time, complete the branch wiring
  6. If time, complete the 4th main line board
  7. If time complete the branch fiddle yard
  8. And then exhibit it all!!!

Another small and continuing job is to sort my rolling stock from myriads of boxes into a series of foam lined stock boxes.  My latest ones contain coal hoppers, and one prosaically entitled ‘cabeese’ (I assume this is the plural of ‘caboose’?)

I hope that this is attainable.  I had hoped to wire the main line this month, but I might not quite get there.  However, two weeks holiday over Christmas may give a chance for some real progress.  Watch this space.

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ESNG meeting – Change of meeting date and loading for Stuttgart

A quick reminder for all ESNG members.

As ever in November, the Wednesday 19 meeting clashes with Stuttgart, and most of the railway and some of the members will be in Germany. We are going to put this meeting back a week to Wednesday 26 November. We’ll see if we have enough energy left to put up a circuit, but no doubt there will be tales tell and purchases to show off!


Today was loading day for the ESNG exhibition.  Allan picked up the van, made one or two other collections, then arrived in Redhill to empty Derek’s garage and our cupboard in the church.

Get that module off my foot, Derek!!!!

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The clipboard man checks we have everything we need.

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All loaded at last.  It looks a bit empty to me?

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Not wanted on journey (much).  And that barrel will be a lot lighter on the way home (mainly thanks to Sean and the Italian’s – sounds like a rock band).  Crates to the right are the empties going back to get the money on the bottles – Germany still has that venerable tradition, that is also a simple way to encourage recycling.

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I’m heading off for Germany on Friday with Maxine, so next week’s posts will be an update on Stuttgart 2014…..

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New Eurostar

News of the new trans-European Eurostar from the Daily Telegraph.

A new 200mph state-of-the-art train has been unveiled in London by Channel Tunnel high-speed train company Eurostar…..

The trains are described as being “inter-operable”, meaning they can run across diverse European signalling systems, opening up the potential for a whole range of new direct services between the UK and European city centre destinations….

So in 2017, I could go to Eurospoor by Eurostar!

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I see that they have taken a different approach to Hornby’s Brighton Belle – the wheels are smaller to get it round 9″ curves.  I’m sure Kato will have no problem, though, when their model comes out.

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And a DVD review – ‘Layout Planning and Design’

Following my purchase of the BRM layout design special, I almost immediately came across a DVD review on the excellent ‘Basilica Fields’ blog.  (At least, it’s an excellent blog if you can cope with someone with a 30-year plan for a layout.  But the information on the old Great Eastern and other lines in East London is fascinating).  So I immediately bought the DVD, which is ‘Right Track 19: Layout Planning and Design’.  Having watched it, I was going to write my own full review here, but realised that the review at Basilica Fields was far better than I could manage.  So here’s an extract:

Many of us railway modellers are wedded to a scale and gauge, and this is the first sacred cow to be unceremoniously kicked over, and a compelling argument is put forward for choosing scale based on wants and needs from a new layout. Coupling choices are the next element to stand in the dock, and not just on the usual ‘play value versus scale appearance’ card we’re all so used to hearing, but instead based on how train length is affected by one type or the other, and how that impacts on our design. Thought provoking stuff.

With our comfortable world now turned upside down, we’re suddenly find ourselves within the habitat of the modeller; all so often our esoteric little hobby drags us away from family down into the shed at the bottom of the garden on a wet and windy night or up into the sauna-like humidity of a loft space in high summer. Not the always the best for harmonious household relations, and it needn’t be so. Based on a stylised representation of footfall though the house, we’re shown where hitherto unconventional sites for a ‘shelfie’ may in fact prove to be ideal and leave us feeling a little less like Johnny-no-mates.

On to the nitty-gritty; what do we want from a layout? Actually, what do we need might be the better question, and after writing out a checklist we’re building a quick mock-up from card and foam to see if all these elements of desire and necessity actually work together. Our perception of perspective, layout width and the backscene are briefly challenged – a foreshadow of things to come later in the programme.

Read the full review here and get a flavour of the DVD below.

The reviewer concludes:

On being sent my gratis reviewer’s copy, I was told to tell it as it is; good or bad – don’t pull your punches. Despite not receiving my promised reviewer’s fee of a bacon sandwich (you owe me in sauce Mistah PMP), I thoroughly recommend this DVD to newcomers of the hobby and grizzled old hands alike.

I agree completely, even having paid for a copy, with no exchange of bacon products at any time.  Again, I recommend this for anyone who like layout planning, and watching it may result in a few plans getting constructed.  Buy it from Activity Media, here.

 

 

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And the rest – Tolworth #2

Having recovered from Fencehouses, here are a few more photos from Tolworth Showtrain – a few more layouts that caught my eye.

First, ‘Cornwallis Yard’, a GWR layout with a little SR thrown in.  With my south London upbringing, and my interest in the Great Eastern I think the natural place for a railway is on top of a brick (or concrete) viaduct.  If it’s a goods yard on top of the viaduct, so much the better!  Here I liked the high and low-level yards, the multiple bridges hiding the exit from the layout to the left, and the nicely modelled buildings.

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Whilst talking about trains on viaducts, ‘Blackfriars Bridge’ is a work in progress, modelling that London terminus around 1900 (or perhaps a little before).  A peek over the wall into the fiddle yard revealed some very interesting early rolling stock.

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ESNG members of a certain vintage will remember Dave Bran’s N-mod module of Cromford, on the Cromford and High Peak mineral line.  There was a tidy ‘N’ gauge version of the same prototype on display.

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I’ll have to include Maloja for the ESNG Swiss fans.  A few years back, there would be some novelty to a Swiss railway (just as there would be for a Japanese one, and other less well known prototypes.)  But as our knowledge of the more unusual prototypes improves, you can’t just get away with novelty at a show – and the standard of modelling seems to get better and better (even on the Thomas and friends layout….)

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And finally, the American room had a nice spread of USA modelling – from ‘Z’ to ‘HO’, standard and narrow gauge, but the lighting was appalling!

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