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Progress during March - Toplight, pill boxes, and horse boxes.


pete_mcfarlane

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I'm slowly building the David Geen E83 Toplight brake composite, the last vehicle I need for the set of 1930s GWR through coaches to serve by one day to be built ex-SER branchline. The sides were a bit fiddly to put together, but include all of the good feature you want in a kit, including the door hinges etched as a single component per door, corridor handrail spacers and separate droplights.

 

I've deviated slightly from the instructions and have assembled the basic body before adding the end detail. I'm not 100% satisfied with the joins betweens side and end, but some filler should hide most of the 0.2mm or so gaps.

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At the same time I've been building this D&S LSWR long horse box. It's one of the recently produced batch sold by Brasmasters. I built the short version about 10 years ago, and this went together in a similar way with no real problems. Unlike the 16' box I managed to get all of the brake gear in place - either I've got better at soldering or the extra wheelbase gives more room to solder. It's waiting the last few whitemetal castings.

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I've also been working on a few odd projects. The Parkside GWR Horsebox is a Parkside kit - I replaced or thinned down the over thick footsteps, and fitted MJT sprung buffers. But otherwise it's as per the kit. Unlike the vehicle next to it, which started out as a Ratio BR Banana van. It now has a new 9' underframe using MJT parts and ABS brake gear and represents a LMS meat van. The body hasn't needed altering.

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I've also detailed a pair of the recent Bachmann SR brakevans These are the left hand ducket variety, which for reasons unknown have the stove chimney on the wrong side. This was removed and a replacement made from plastic rod. The axleboxes were modified, as the real thing has a wider sloping front different type to the plate front examples on the Bachmann model (I don't think many of the real thing had this type - possibly they used an atypical preserved example as a base?). This was done by adding plastic strip to either side of the existing box, and then filing the front at an angle. I fitted the brake loops, but not the strangely shaped brake shoe linkages, fitting simple plastic rod replacements instead. Bachmann having cranked theirs, presumably to clear the couplers.

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Lastly, and right at the end of my time period is one of the early COV AB airbraked vans. Another Bachmann model, with minor detailing using Shawpan brake pipes. Like the brakevans this will have minor touching up rather than a full repaint.

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April should see more work on the Toplight, a Branchlines SER luggage van and hopefully some of these models getting painted.

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  • RMweb Gold

Really like the LSWR long cattle wagon, I haven't seen one of those before. I'm guessing they were used for transporting pretty valuable beasts, that had to have a farm hand travelling with them. Very different from a draughty GWR slated cattle truck!

 

Dave

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  • RMweb Gold

Toplights and horseboxes - it doesn't get much better than that :-)

 

It's all looking really good, I think. The Slater's horsebox compares very well with the etched brass one, at least judging by the photos.

 

Keep it coming, please :-)

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My brain wasn't working last night when I typed this up - the LSWR vehicle is a Horsebox and not a special cattle wagon. Doh! Such things did exist - with a compartment for an attendant in the same style as horsebox and were used to transport prize bulls and such like.

 

I often wondered what the poor groom had to do when they needed to answer the call of nature, as toilets in Horseboxes didn't appear until the 1930s....

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  • RMweb Gold

That makes more sense, I thought those cattle were being spoilt!

 

Dave

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