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Curlew

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  1. See here for a larger scale map, if you are not already aware.... View map: Ordnance Survey, Northumberland (New Series) LXXXVI.11 (Seaton Valley; Tynemouth; Whitley And Monkseaton) - Ordnance Survey 25 inch England and Wales, 1841-1952 (nls.uk) https://maps.nls.uk/view/132279656
  2. A guess is that dashed means single track on the OS map, but lifted on the track plan sketch. OS maps were not always fully updated when reprinted so what is drawn on the map may sometimes be many years out of date.
  3. Just a few more photos of progress on the station buildings. The roof will have to be removable to allow for track cleaning and dealing with derailments etc. Amongst other things I have added 10mm wide horizontal beams for the roof to sit on - not prototypical but necessary, I think, for the rigidity of the model. There's a bit of a gap to fill in yet between the roof and the underlying superstructure. I have tried to make the facilities at the station fairly basic, rather than a grand terminus. Work still to do on detailing the two external buildings though, which look very plain at the moment. The station will largely be open, despite the overall roof. The road side, shown below will allow lorries to draw up to the platform for loading and unloading parcels etc. Main passenger facilities will be in the single storey block on the right of the photo below.
  4. Curlew

    2. Another Peek

    Thanks. Adapting things is far more fun than just following instructions. That way, you end up with something unique and interesting, I hope!
  5. I have laid out a full size plot of the station area. The plain lines to the right of the sleepered track represent the alignment of the sea wall. I have also started work on a station building based on heavily butchered Peco parts. This will largely sit under the overall roof. The roof for the single storey bit will actually be flat. The peaked roof is for use elsewhere and is just holding the station walls together for the photos. This photo shows a representation of the central arch of the ceremonial arch to be used as the scenic break in front of the fiddle yard. It looks huge but is actually slightly underscale compared to the design of the real thing. The road level will be slightly higher than in the photo, as I have to allow for the extra depth of the tramway rails buried in the roadway.
  6. I have long been fascinated by colonial and other offshore railways like the Jersey Eastern and British-run companies in Latin America. This will be a small, experimental project, a bit of fun, to model something of the happy-go-lucky style of the more eccentric type, free from the attentions of the British Board of Trade and its successors. You have to imagine a pier with trains and trams. The train part will be loosely based on the trackplan of Shrewsbury Abbey station, formerly part of the Shropshire & Montgomeryshire Railway. The main difference is that the left-hand goods siding becomes a line to the dockside. I have added a tramway with a loop, which also leads to the docks, shown here on the plan below. Above the railway in this plan will be a sea wall. To the left bottom, the tramway and the railway combine for the short distance to the dockside, off-scene. To the right, both the tramway and the railway pass through a ceremonial arch into the fiddle yard, something like this... ...though the railway arch will have to be modified to allow trains to pass through. The tramway will pass through the central arch, along with a road. Before finalising the trackplan. I am building an overall roof for the station - necessary to shade passengers and trains from the intense sunshine and add a unique character to the scene. This will enable me to judge better how far apart the tracks should be, platform width etc. I am combining four Ratio station train shed roofs to make this. I am strengthening the structure by adding extra crossbeams along the full width of the structure. The next step on this roof is to add more crossbeams and detailed girders. I have also started work on fabricating a station building. I shall give a more detailed description of both in another blog entry, in due course.
  7. Looks very much like the southern Lake District - maybe Grange over Sands area? The coaches look a bit like an LMS push-pull set. The loco seems to be push-pull fitted, I think.
  8. No photo, I am afraid but saw a sign at some traffic lights on Wednesday... Motion operated traffic lights (Flashing does not work)
  9. Wasn't the bodywork the responsibility of Metro Cammell rather than Sentinel?
  10. That's in case she gets stuck in a compartment with no access to a toilet - maybe? ;)
  11. Would be so much easier to fit everything in if you tried it in N gauge. Sorry I had to mention it 👿
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