Quote and pictures of the week….

The most excellent UK theologian NT Wright (almost my personal guru), talking about the Apostle Paul’s writings….

“All this is of course complex, but necessarily so.  Attempts to reduce that complexity in the pursuit of an easier comprehensibility are the equivalent of trying to make a model locomotive out of Playdough.  Some parts may look familiar, but the train won’t run down the track.”

Sorry Tom, but this applies to a lot of my modelling, as well as to theology!  Now to read the remaining 9oo pages of the book.  And you thought model railways were fun….

Meanwhile, elsewhere in the ecclesiastical world, the Rev. Awdry appears to be in trouble.  Well, at least Thomas, Annie and Clarabelle are.  Paul’s photographs from the last ESNG club night show the offending items being taken to the scrapyard – probably to face a charge of heresy.  Thomas appears to have lost his funnel after a little heavy-handed questioning.  No-one expects the Spanish Inquisition!

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Off my trolley – Pacific Electric – Toluca Yard

It’s been far too long since I posted on traction and trolleys.  But the start of this post is a reminder of how useful Google Earth can be.  First, here is a screen dump from Google Earth, “somewhere in Los Angeles”, with aerial data taken in 2o13.

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Not much of interest here for the discerning railroad modeller, you say.  But if you find the timeline slider on the Google Earth menu, we can roll back the years.  And hey presto, we have a picture of the same area in 2002.

toluca2002

In fact we could have rolled back time to the 1980’s, but the photographs then were lower resolution USGS black-and-white shots, and amazingly, the area has hardly changed in that 20 years.

But what do we have here?  This is Toluca Yard, at the entrance of the Pacific Electric Belmont tunnel that ran from here to the Subway Terminal in the centre of town.  Below are some photographs of it at the end of its working life in 1955.  (There are plenty of photographs on the web, some in colour – hunt the Pacific Electric Railway Historical Society site – but I think these are free-to-use shots).

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I began to get interested with Toluca as a module.  A little scaling off Google Earth gave me the following plan, with a 1200 x 400 mm module superimposed.

toluca2002 - module

There were six yard tracks, and there was a cross-over just inside the tunnel portal to give access to both up and down lines.  This size plan would make a good stand-alone layout, built into a box, so that the main line goes off scene under the flyover to the left and into the tunnel to the right.  It might look best looking towards the slope, i.e. top to bottom.  If one wanted to make an N-club module out of this, a longer board would be needed, to model the full flyover to the left and a little more of the hill to the right.  I’m not sure that selective compression would work that well.  The yard could be reduced to four tracks, and made narrower and shorter, but really, it’s already tiny!  I think the grade was quite steep into the tunnel.  If used as a module running any trains and not just interurbans, the gradient might also need to be a little shallower.

Anyways, Toluca Yard is a good minimum space design.  Any models of it out there already?

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Fun? A little of what you fancy does you good….

“And she’ll have fun, fun, fun, till her daddy takes the t-bird away” (Beach Boys)

“I know it is wet and the sun is not sunny, but we can have lots of good fun that is funny.”  (Dr. Seuss, The Cat in the Hat)

“Rules should always be bent, if not broken. It’s the only way to have any fun.”    Aylson Noel, Evermore

I’ve finally got to admit whether I think model railways are ‘fun’.  A difficult task considering the strong views expressed by the previous three posts on the subject.  Perhaps it’s best described by a series of scenarios.

ESNG club night – Every couple of weeks, I go to our club night.  We usually set up our modular circuit and play trains.  And sometimes, when we haven’t the energy, we just sit and drink tea and talk.  Club night is a time to spend time with friends.  So model railways are fun because they give time with friends, often to share in our mutual hobby, but equally just to enjoy the friendships.

‘Railfanning’ – And when I am at club night, I’d confess I can spend much of the evening just watching the trains go by.  Who cares that trains from three continents are running together, and that Thomas has just overtaken a British High Speed Train?  Railfanning brings back memories of seeing some of the models on show as the real thing.  There’s the appreciation of just how good some of these models are.  And it’s almost as good as standing beside a full-sized track but without the long wait between trains.  So railfanning is definitely fun.

Operating – I’ve never had the chance to get into big time timetable or train order operating, as in the US hobby.  And as my home layout always seems under construction, there isn’t much running there too.  But at exhibitions there’s often a chance to operate in a more deliberate way.  Running my little ‘Earlswood’ layout all day at a show was great fun – just shunting a few wagons around, but setting them at the right points at the right industries.  And at Stuttgart last year, operating the junction between Britain and the rest of the world was definitely ‘fun’ – if only in small quantities, when you had four trains coming at you in all directions.

Building – Fun isn’t the right word here; ‘satisfying’ may be better, via ‘frustrating’ (when things don’t work out) and ‘painful’ (when you pick up the wrong end of the soldering iron).  But it’s definitely fun seeing something grow from a flat sheet of wood, plastic or metal into a model of a locomotive, building or full layout.  I’ve lost a little of my younger enthusiasm for building things, but it’s a vital part of what makes our hobby ‘fun’.

Scenery – If building fulfils one’s creative urge, scenery fulfils the artistic.  It’s again satisfying, and undeniably fun, to see one’s mental image transformed into something that is either recognisable as a real place, or generating an artist’s impression.  Composition, colour and the like are all important.  What could be more fun than discovering hidden talent – even if the scenery is more Dali than Constable?

Exhibitions – A feature of the UK model railway scene is the many exhibitions.  Last weekend I spent a pleasant hour in the local ‘O’ gauge narrow gauge society exhibition.  I don’t model in this scale and don’t intend to, but there was good modelling, interesting layouts and friendly people.  Only complaint was the lack of bacon rolls offered with the coffee.  Another fun side of railway modelling is enjoying other people’s models.

Escape – We live in a very pressured world.  All the above interests offer and escape from the usual pressures of life.  They may introduce new ones – to complete a layout for the next club show, for instance.  But these are self-imposed, ‘fun’ challenges (usually).  Model railways, like many hobbies, offer a healthy escape from our everyday lives.

And bending the rules! – For me, this is important.  I admire those who can stick closely to a chosen prototype period and even scale.  But for me, part of the fun of model railways is the chance to bend the rules, do something different, and have a little side project here and there.

So my conclusion – why do I bother modelling railways?  Because it’s ‘fun’, of course!  And whilst ‘fun’ is a poor word to describe the full breadth of the hobby, can you really think of a better one?

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Model railways might be “fun”

For part 3 of this mini-epic, here’s Chris Mears’ take on the previous articles, posted on his own blog.  Apologies, Chris, as I’ve just lifted your comments from your re-blog.  (I am never quite sure where copyright starts on a blog – I assume a long attributed quote is OK, even if any permission is retrospective!)

I enjoy the way in which Mike Cougill thinks about the hobby. I envy his willingness to ask not only good but seemingly new questions and I completely agree so many of his viewpoints. As rich as his questions were it was Simon’s really terrific blog post, which I’m sharing here, that I found really focused my attention on the original twenty questions and my response to them.

We spend a lot of time trying to justify our involvement in model railways to those outside the hobby. These models we build are amazing works of engineering and of art. They are something to be proud of and the time invested in them was wisely spent not just for the satisfaction of a model’s completion but for the growth we triggered in ourselves as we honed the craft of the hobby and our mastery of its skills. It disappoints me when we reduce all of this work down to something as flippant as “Model railroading is fun” or quip that we don’t really take it seriously. What’s so wrong with discussing the hobby maturely? The trains are only the muse, it’s our reactions that inspire these great discussions and those are great intellectual pursuits.

It’s not that model railroading isn’t fun but we’re really selling ourselves short by always returning to that point. Further, we’re promoting the idea of how trivial this all is but not sharing the true depth of satisfaction one can derive.

Chris highlights the essential point here – yes model railroading is ‘fun’ but the word ‘fun’ doesn’t go deep enough in describing our hobby.  ‘Deeply satisfying’ would seem to be one possible phrase to do the job – but this isn’t much of a catch phrase!  (And I can add a number of rather negative activities that might be described as ‘deeply satisfying’ – but won’t in case of offending my more sensitive readers – perhaps one might start with ‘ethnic cleansing is deeply satisfying’.)

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ESNG meeting – 21 August 2014

Holiday season must be coming to the end, as we had a good turnout this time around.  Good to see Peter back from his travels.  We last saw him at the ESNG show in April.  Since then he has been to Ireland and Cyprus, cruised across the Atlantic, and explored New York, Washington and Boston, travelling by train between cities.  All right for some!

We were enthusiastic tonight, and put up a large circuit.  This at least meant that Paul’s Japanese goods train didn’t catch up with itself.  He managed 59 bogie wagons before derailment happened (apart from the time the hon. secretary turned the wrong controller and put the goods train into overdrive).

Martin (jnr.) had a UK train with two Class 66’s and a string of bogie stone hoppers running.  I saw the prototype of this at Kew Bridge station  yesterday as it left the 3rd rail electrified lines and onto non-electrified cross-London freight lines.  Cross-London freight, especially in steam days, is an interesting subject for a model – all sorts of engines from all regions and a variety of goods stock to follow.

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I had brought along a train to run for once, but couldn’t find a space on the circuit.  Finally I got it running – a D&H PA diesel (LifeLike) pulling seven streamline D&H coaches (a Con-Cor set).  I had replaced the coach trucks with Micro-Trains ones, and having had trouble with the coupling droppers catching on our bumpy modular joins, snipped off the droppers on the coach couplings.  After all, they will run as a set, and I don’t need magnetic uncoupling and shunting to work.  The whole set ran very well, and looked impressive as it made stately progress around the circuit.

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The hon. treasurer was still on holiday, so I ended up in charge of collecting the dues and the annual subscriptions still outstanding.  It was very interesting – everyone came up to me and offered me money.  When Derek is here, he has to pursue members around the hall to extract anything from them.  Technique?  Character?? Beginner’s luck???  Who knows, but the club is solvent for another month.

 

 

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A cheerful interlude – two train crashes

As a welcome break from the philosophy of model railways, Allan came across these pictures in the news, of two recent train crashes.  Fortunately, casualties seem to be limited.  First, Switzerland, where a RhB train came off the narrow-gauge track over a ravine at Graubuenden in eastern Switzerland.

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I always have this perfect picture of Swiss railways.  It was a shock when I came across an article a few years ago bemoaning how poor the time-keeping was and how crowded some trains were.  Here, I believe the train hit a landslip, so the accident was hard to avoid.

The second photo is from Manilla, where an LRT went through the buffers at its urban terminal.  This looks like typical Manilla traffic to me!  My recollection of it was dodgems at their worst.  A train popping out into the road is probably a minor annoyance compared with manic minibuses, road rage with guns, typhoons and general demolition derby driving.  This was one place in the world where I was very pleased to have a driver!

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Railway modelling is not fun

Sorry, but part 2 of our ‘fun’ series is another re-blog from Simon Dunkley’s site. He rightly points out the Mike Cougill has forgotten to define ‘fun’, and goes on and explores what model railroad ‘fun’ might be.  In a recent post he confessed to having a degree in psychology.  Maybe it shows here….  But what does it say about me – a civil engineer who enjoys reading posts by someone with a degree in psychology?

Simon's avatarThe Erratic and Wandering Journey

My friend Mike Cougill has made a few posts recently about model railroading and “fun”. He even went so far as to pose 20 questions on the subject. As he has recently revealed, these reflect his self-questionning, and he has answered some of the questions. I had a problem with the questions, as Mike had (intentionally, I am sure) left out any sort of definition as to what fun might mean. It got me thinking – I am sure that getting people thinking was Mike’s aim. It usually is.

Fun” is an interesting word. Originally the way to have fun was to play a trick, hoax, etc on someone – so fun came at another’s expense (for example, the bawdy and riotous story “Tom Jones” treats it this way). Definitions change over time (awful used to be a major compliment!) but the element of spontaneity…

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Are model railways “fun”?

I’ve been thinking in recent weeks about ‘why’ I actually model railways.  What do I really enjoy about model railways?  And conversely, what frustrates me when I don’t seem to find the time to get anything done (as at present).  But as I was getting to put ‘keyboard to screen’ this week, I came across an post and a couple of responses to said post that put it all down better than I could.  (Not that I agreed with all of it, but it made me think).

So the next four posts will be re-blogs of the original article and two responses, plus my rather derivative thoughts.  I might sneak in a cheerful post somewhere along the line about a couple of recent train crashes, provided by Allan.

I’ll start with Mike Cougill’s OST Blog.  I know I’ve mentioned Mike before, as his small O-fine layout and modelling is inspirational, and his ideas often helpful and challenging (as characterised by the Missing Conversation series of e-books).  Here’s his article, reproduced in full I’m afraid, as it’s difficult just to quote from it.  (But slightly reformatted – sorry, the report writer in me took over).  For the full post and comments, go to here.

Premise: Model Railroading is not fun.

Questions.

  1. Is model railroading frustrating?
  2. Why do people find aspects of it so frustrating?
  3. Why is fun a prerequisite for a hobby?
  4. What constitutes fun?
  5. When is model railroading fun?
  6. Is model railroading always fun (that is, people automatically have fun when doing it), or is it fun because people find meaningful ways to pursue it?
  7. Are there assumptions about fun and this hobby?
  8. What assumptions?
  9. What assumptions do we bring?
  10. Why do we bring any assumptions to it?
  11. Where or how do such assumptions begin?
  12. Are assumptions hurting the hobby?
  13. Why don’t we challenge assumptions about the hobby?
  14. Are people afraid to challenge their assumptions about model railroading?
  15. What would happen if more people did?
  16. Would people still be having fun?
  17. Would that result in a better hobby?

Boiling it down to three questions:

  1. Are decades old assumptions hurting or helping model railroading?
  2. Why are people adverse to talking about all this?
  3. What would happen if we did?

The answers dear reader, should you choose to pursue them, are entirely up to you.

Regards,
Mike

If all that’s a bit heavy for you, just go and run a train or hack some plastic or brass about!  But it struck a few chords with me and next time I’ll genuinely repost a response from another blog.  Happy modelling – even if it’s not much fun!

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Channel tunnel layout

One of my first posts was a description of a visit to a Channel Tunnel ‘N’ gauge layout from Cha(i)rman Allan.  Here are a few photos from his return visit (apologies for the flash reflections – must get a new photographer).

After my visit last October, I paid a return visit to the small museum at Peene in Kent, the Elham Valley Line Trust.  Here are some photos of their two N-gauge layouts.  These are of the Channel Tunnel layout.

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Wot I did on my holidays

Our week away was our usual pilgrimage to the ‘New Wine’ church conference, with 12,000 people camping on the Bath & West Showground near Shepton Mallet, Somerset in the south-west of the UK.  The Showground is about 5 miles from Pilton, site of the Glastonbury Festival.  It has similar views of Glastonbury Tor, but from a different direction.  Of course the weather is the typical Somerset micro-climate, often including lots of rain.  Fortunately, there is less mud at New Wine, as the Showground has better infrastructure.   Still the sun shined nearly all week this year, until the moment we took the tent down and the heavens opened.

However, the point of this post is to describe the miniature railway that is on the Showground, run by the East Somerset Society of Model & Experimental Engineers.  They describe themselves like this on their web site:

Founded in 2001, the Society is a relative newcomer in the well-established field of Model Engineering societies. It is based at the Bath & West Showground near Shepton Mallet, Somerset in the south-west of the UK, and draws members from as far afield as Bristol and Yeovil. Members come from many different walks of life and are of varying levels of skill and experience – and all are still learning!

Their interests include locos and stock in 3½”, 5″ and 7¼” gauges (just a little larger than ‘N’ gauge), and they have an extensive line, a lot of which is dual gauge for the larger two scales.  Each year at New Wine, ESSMEE open up the railway for the day and offer rides for all and sundry.  I’m not really into large scale models like this, but the sound and smell of these little steam locomotives is very evocative of their larger cousins.  And it’s rather fun having to wait for the level crossing before crossing the line.  I’ve posted a couple of photographs from their web-site below, to give a flavour of the operation.  I love the dual gauge trackwork, especially the points.  Read more about this little railway at http://www.essmee.org.uk/ .

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