I’m not optimistic

Reading the local paper and Network Rail’s website I find the good news that….

More trains and more seats as Network Rail kicks off five-year £2.3bn programme in South East

This includes…..

Sussex – Passengers in Sussex will also see some major changes, including the construction of an extra platform at Redhill, to increase capacity at the station…..

Good news – an extra platform (perhaps replacing the old Post Office bay on the east side of the station.

Bad news – last time I looked, Redhill was in Surrey.  Hope they build it in the right place!!

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Countdown to ESNGtacy (with apologies to Steely Dan)

We panic onwards towards the 12th April and the ESNG show.  Of course, it all happens at once doesn’t it.  My wife is due for a hip replacement on the same day (hi-op not to be confused with hip-hop), but luckily she has to check in at the hospital at 7am, so she’ll be dropped at the door and I’ll be off to the school to set up.  And my mother passed away on Sunday – at 94 not unexpected, and quite peacefully, sad but not devastating.  So there are just a few more jobs to do this week.  I’ve decided that they put all the nice people in local government and pensions and the like on the help desk for the recently deceased.  I have to say that everyone has been really helpful.

But the show must go on (I feel another song coming on).  The show guide is off to the printers (see below), I’ve tracked down almost all the exhibitors (please do turn up, all of you) and the banners are around the town.  All we need to do is get things set up and running, even, and hope the punters turn up.

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Bluebell photo-fest

Here are a dozen photos from a family visit to the Bluebell Railway in 2003.  The Bluebell was one of the earliest preserved lines in the UK, and is still one of the best.  My daughter must have been all of 11 in these photographs, as she hit the tender age of 21 last October!  I’ll leave you to ‘spot’ the locomotives in the pictures.  Following on from my post on ‘N’ gauge, I think all but one are available, or soon to be available in ‘OO’ gauge – but for that matter, the majority are also available in ‘N’.

CNV00030 CNV00035 CNV00025 CNV00031 CNV00038 CNV00027 CNV00039 CNV00032 CNV00033 CNV00021 CNV00023 CNV00034

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ESNG meeting, 4 April 2014

Last meeting before the exhibition!  Predictably, we spent a lot of time discussing logistics.  Who will be doing what, when can the van pick up layouts, when can we get into the school.

We did have one scare last week, when Surrey County Council announced that it was resurfacing the road past the school starting the week before the show.  Help!!!!  This is logical, of course, to do the work in the school holidays, be we want to get 100+ cars plus vans into the school over the weekend.  However, a few phone calls revealed that there had been such a public outcry that they were only resurfacing part of the road – the part away from the school.  We breathed again.

My only complication is that my wife heard that the date for her hip replacement is the Saturday of the show.  But actually, that will work better than if it had been before.  She is booked in to arrive at the hospital at 7am, so I’m afraid she will be dropped at the door, and I’ll go off to carry on setting up the show.  I may have to miss the traditional post-show curry, though, and that would be a shame….

Back to club night, we did get the usual circuit up and running, with a nice variety of trains from the UK, USA, Switzerland, Austria and Japan.  Of course, just before the show, one controller is playing up, but better to find that out now.

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Why N gauge?

I seemed to have wandered away from N gauge modelling in recent posts.  So with my 100th post on the blog, it’s back to my roots (for now) and to ask the question, why model in N gauge.

A little background may be in order.  I started with model trains with a Hornby clockwork ‘O’ gauge system on the floor of the living room.  Great fun!  At the age of 10, my father and I upgraded to ‘OO’ gauge with a 6×4 and then 7×5 layout.  We started at a reasonable standard, with Peco track and points (when they first came out!)

In my mid-teens, the 7×5 became a shelf layout along one side of my bedroom, and then we built a 9×8 shed in the back garden – a cosy empire with heat, light and insulation.  Best of all, in winter you could turn the heat on from the house to warm the shed up before venturing outside.  We built a continuous run layout round the walls, but reading the model magazine convinced us of the need for a fiddle yard / staging, so the final layout in the shed was the classing end-to-end branchline – Southern of course!  I learnt a lot about model building at that time, and scratch built a few coaches (quite respectable) and tried a loco or two (kit built, OK, scratch build, far less so).

Then to university and dabbling in the Great Eastern in EM.  Followed by flat sharing and marriage.  Railways took a back seat, but moving to a house in Redhill meant we had a loft space, and I returned to ‘O’ gauge.  I still have the kit and scratch built stock from this era.  Moving house in Redhill and converting the new house’s loft into a fourth bedroom was the end of modelling for a while.

Then, 15 years ago, ESNG approached Earlswood Baptist church with a request for the club to meet in the church hall.  I was on the church leadership team at the time (and I still am), and knowing my interests I was told, ‘Jon, you can liaise with them’.  So I not only liaised, but also joined the club and went ‘N’ gauge, and quickly adopting USA outline as having reliable models and interesting prototypes.

Yet walking around Alexandra Palace last weekend, I was thinking, why do I model in ‘N’?  I came away still very satisfied with the scale, and really quite uninspired with the other scales.  Why?  I suggest there are a number of factors involved:

  • ‘N’ is small enough to fit in the house.
  • ‘N’ allows me to model trains in a landscape, rather than just a railway.
  • It’s getting quite rare to see an ‘OO’ (and larger) layout that really appeals.  People seem to have done everything, and the classic GWR branchline is, to quote a well known phrase, boring if nice.  ‘N’ layouts often still manage to do something a little different.
  • ‘N’ models are still improving release by release.  It’s exciting to see the advances made in quality and reliability, now matching the larger scales.
  • There are just too many commercial models in ‘OO’.  I can now buy off the shelf most of the models I hankered after or tried to build as a teenager – a T9, and N class 2-6-0, a King Arthur 4-6-0, and M7, a Beattie Well Tank, an O2 coming, a C 0-6-0.  The list goes on….  Really, it’s just become too expensive and easy!  Perhaps this will change as ‘N’ improves further?

The future?  I may go back to scratch building in ‘O’ gauge if my eyes give up on ‘N’.  I do like making things, and an ‘O’ gauge trolley layout would be small enough for my now reclaimed loft.  Or for a real challenge, what about ‘S’?  Then I would really have to build nearly everything!  And then there is the other challenge to dabble in fine scale 2mm…..  Whatever!  There’s more than enough to keep me interested in this excellent hobby!!

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EVEN MORE SHEEP

Keeping the antipodean theme, I enjoy blogs for the modelling knowledge worldwide. And the particular challenges of modelling different parts of the world. Here in Australia, the challenge is enough sheep….

BURROWA's avatarBurrowa is an HO scale model railway set in the NSW southern tablelands

An update on the sheep – there have been 80 beasts added to the flock on both sides of the track, so here they are grazing in the morning sun.

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Sugar cane railways – 1

In 2010, Maxine and I we fortunate enough to spend two fantastic weeks Queensland, in the general area of Cairns. We used the conventional Australian check-list, from “I-Spy Australia”.

  • Shark (small friendly 6 ft one) – tick!
  • Snake (harmless 4 ft one) – tick!
  • Crocodile (medium sized and also in burger) – tick!
  • Kookaburra (lots including one almost on our balcony) – tick!
  • Duck billed platypus (three of them) – tick!
  • Kangaroos (and wallabies) – tick!
  • Leeches (3 made unsuccessful attack on legs) – tick!
  • Drongo (the bird species) – tick!
  • Cassowary (father plus chick) – very, very, big tick!!!!

This list reveals my other time-consuming hobby – bird watching (mostly of the feathered kind).  Similar to train spotting, really, as I have a big database of worldwide sightings.  Just the objects of interest are more difficult to find, as they don’t run on rails to a timetable.

But we also saw a few trains….  Best of all were the sugar-cane lines.  Around 2 foot gauge, these are laid out like a big train set around a sugar refining works, with loops here and there to load the cane, and random turnouts and branches following the field edges.  Our first train, about 50 trucks long, was crossing the road as we approached Mossman.

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And finally, just to show that there are short cane trains around, we came across this one, with only a dozen trucks, running crossing the prosaically named ‘Bruce Highway’ on the way back to Cairns.

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Of course, my thoughts turned to modelling potential!  Not a great variety in stock, but very interesting tropical locations.  For those interested, this site for Queensland is excellent, as is this one worldwideBackwoods Minatures make OO9 kits of Fiji sugar cane railways, that might be near enough for a small diorama or model.

xfwldm xhc2

I’ll blog about the sugar cane works another time.

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London Festival of Railway Modelling

I actually got to a model railway show this weekend – the London Festival of Railway Modelling at Alexandra Palace.  Two work colleagues, who might even qualify as good friends were going, so I sent my apologies to the morning service at church and headed for Redhill station for the 7:52am train. As usual on a Sunday, there were engineering works around, so our train to Victoria took a short diversion via Balham and didn’t stop at Clapham Junction.  At Victoria, transfer to the Victoria line (about the only London Underground line working due to some signalling fault) and up to Kings Cross.  We had time for a coffee and to admire the new roof over the side concourse before finding our train to take us north. We had seen a charter train on the departure board, and after a few minutes a blue Class 47 came into the station with a rake of old maroon coaching stock, plus a couple of Pullmans.  Aha, steam excursion, we thought.  Sure enough, drawing out of Kings Cross, we saw the train was headed by a shining rebuilt West Country 4-6-2, Braunton. Ten minutes later, as we got off the train at Alexandra Palace, it occurred to us that the excursion was due to leave five minutes after us, and it would have to pass through Ally Pally.  So (with a good number of other train-iacs) we waited and were rewarded by the sight of the West Country passing through the station at a steady pace.  It took me back to the last days of steam on British Railways…. 34046_Braunton_West_Somerset_Railway

After this excellent start to the day, we walked up the hill to Alexandra Palace, and got on with the real business of the day. The Ally Pally show is one of the larger annual events in the UK, and this year had about 40 layouts, numerous traders, and a lot of society and demonstration stands.  I attended this show last year (in the snow and ice, I recall, rather than today’s sunshine).  2014 seemed to have less stands – things were quite well spaced out – but the quality of exhibits seemed higher. There were the usual selection of British branch line layouts, but really these have been overdone over the years, and although very well modelled, fail to inspire.  So what were the interesting layouts?

  • Some very well conceived ‘O’ gauge layouts, including St Marnock, a small Scottish loco shed in British Railway days, and Oldham King Street Parcels, a small station and parcels depot.  The latter appealed as it is modelled on a brick arch embankment – as a South London boy, trains belong on the top of brick arches.
  • Well modelled European prototypes including Swiss, Austrian and Spanish layouts.
  • Heculanem Dock in OO, a Liverpool docks layout that included the Liverpool Overhead Railway – and a ladybird that was crawling along the dock, having made guest appearances on cranes on the previous day.
  • Overlord, with almost more ship and military models than OO trains, representing a loading point for the 1944 D-day landings.
  • An excellent HO USA modular layout, the RS Tower.

In 2mm and N gauge, there were some very good layouts.  Lambourn is in 2mm scale and is some 30 years old.  The layout itself still looks good, a tribute to Martin Allen’s original work, but the trains were more recent models.

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Bevois Park and St Denys models a near scale half mile of main line, the prototype being just outside Southampton.  This was of great interest to one of my colleagues, who was brought up half-a-mile away.

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Finally, Dawes Creek models Victoria, Australia in the 1980’s.  Nice to see something a little difference, and the model stood out with its ‘down-under’ scenery and a very well pained backscene with the low horizon characteristics of flat countryside.

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And as a final bonus to a good day out, there were two Class 73 Electro-diesels in Redhill station when I got back.  Always one of my favourite locomotives, from their early days in places like Hither Green yard to later days heading (or pushing) the Gatwick Express past my garden in Redhill

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3 weeks to the ESNG show

And you will get much better “bargains” in the club shop than the one below! (Can’t seem to reblog this from the ‘Playing Trains‘ blog, so I’ve just copied it).  I hate to think what it would have cost with a ‘mint original box’.

When two positives make a negative…

Posted on 24/02/2014 by

Those two being Yes and Alright… As in Yeah, right!

What

How much? It’s just a toy train FFS!

esng2014

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ESNG meeting 19 March 2014

Plenty of people this week, but we were a little short of trains! We seemed happy to sit and chat over the inevitable teas and coffees.

However, Paul had his usual selection of Japanese stock, this week an interesting collection of suburban multiple units.  Dave rang the changes with a 35-year old Union Pacific DD40 Bo-Bo-Bo-Bo and tender.  It may have been old, with genuinely weathered paintwork, but it still ran like a watch (and not a Mickey Mouse one).  Finally John with a little help from Allan ran some attractive Swiss passenger trains.

And Duncan and John continued crocheting the catenary for Alpenbahn (PS, slight correction on last month’s meeting – Duncan is doing the work, John is acting as a consultant).

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