Jump to content
 

Northroader

RMweb Premium
  • Posts

    6,900
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Northroader

  1. REMEMBER THE OUEST. I came across this picture the other day, an old OEUST Buddicom 2-4-0, very much a French version of a LNWR “Crewe Goods”. It looks as if it’s waiting the scrap man, so probably 1900s, but a lovely prototype. I was pushing the OUEST system back on pages 18 - 19 of this thread, also a link to Clive Lammings pages back on page 4, so here’s an essay of his on this theme (including wagon drawings): https://trainconsultant.com/2023/10/30/la-compagnie-de-louest-et-son-histoire-ephemere/ and while I’m at it another one of his on “Bicyclettes”, “Boers”, and the OUEST suburban lines: https://trainconsultant.com/2022/01/10/il-etait-une-fois-dans-louest-la-bicyclette-mais-pas-le-velo/ There are still two OUEST tank engines waiting for their superstructures in the railway room, also for a layout to run on. Last year was a writeoff for such progress, maybe this year.
  2. Now, self effacing modesty is all very well, but I think all the congregation of RMweb who ve met either of you would say different, so keep flying the flag! Mind, venturing that far down Corporation Road in Maindy……
  3. Thanks for the photos, I enjoyed seeing Lockdown Fen in action, as well as the other jobs you highlight. This was a show well worth attending.
  4. Up and Down was peculiar in South Wales, the Valley lines like the Taff Vale regarded them in accordance with the prevailing gradient, down through the valley towards the sea, but the lines absorbed into the GWR earlier on, such as the Llynfi and Ogmore, or the Monmouthshire, had the GWR thinking of down from London applied. The result was that up and down were opposite directions in adjacent valleys, and this stayed on into BR days. Then on the North to West line, the directions switched, a Plymouth to Manchester express was a down train as far as Hereford Barrs Court, then became an up train on to Shrewsbury.
  5. Mon ami, Routier du Nord, il dit: “Les Signaux?? Pouff!!, tres simples…”
  6. Sorry to hear you’re having a bad patch (also miss T) hope things are picking up. As to signal box kits, I came across one maker on RMweb, and jotted it down for reference. No knowledge or experience of them, so anyway: https://railmodel.co.uk/collections/frontpage
  7. Now just a listed building, formerly the “Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Hospital” (as a kid I used to think it was “Ioneer”) used to do all that sort of stuff for what it is now Hipposhire and Telfland. I got my glasses from there, plus they extracted my tonsils and adenoids, which used to be a fashionable medical stunt. Sic transit and all that…
  8. There’s a little bit stirring on the scenic side of things, as I’ve been chopping up layers of 10mm foamboard to form a support for the ground shell. They’ve gone down rather like contours on a map, and it has been useful to show me what sort of shape and height the “hills” can be, without overly dramatic gradients. Rather less than I envisaged, of course, but I can still gain a bit more contrasting height with some trees and foliage.
  9. I know, when was the last time we had a pre- Raphaelite?
  10. RED/GREEN - COLOUR BLINDNESS. A snowy night in 1875, and I’m sorry to say two of the B.P. Singles were involved in a tragedy with the premier trains in Sweden. I thought I’d post this as a look into operating circumstances back then, and it’s not from a link you’d expect on RMweb, but most interesting. My first move when joining BR was a trip to the Crewe works, which was the nearest to where I lived, for a medical, including a colour blindness test, and the need for this ties into what happened back then. https://vision.psychol.cam.ac.uk/jdmollon/papers/MollonCavoniusOnLagerlundaCollision.pdf
  11. The clocks went on and I go to bed early, and only just caught up (excuses, excuses) but happy birthday belated wishes.
  12. Well, Hattons were very popular with their “generic” range… (what’s that? Oh, yes….)
  13. SWEDISH BEYER PEACOCKS. As it’s Easter, here’s a parade of elegance, some of the old engines running on Swedish State: First off, a 2-2-2, which you also get in Scotland, the Netherlands, or Portugal. Then a 2-4-0, firstly in its preserved state, which also shows the livery, Olive green with black and white lining out, then after a rebuild, Belpaire firebox, and spark arrestor added. This looks like an early built up pattern, most of them appear to be a casting, and to me they do nothing to help the appearance. Perhaps choose the 1880s era before they became widespread? What about a nifty little 0-4-2ST? So to the class F. Looking things up in my Bradley, the LSWR directors needed an engine capable of working the newly built Ilfracombe line, steep gradients but also lightly built. They had learnt to grow wary of Mr. Beattie, junior’s, bright ideas, and he was told straight to ask Beyer Peacock. They proposed copies of their newly built Swedish engines, and the Swedish Railways engineer gave a glowing recommendation to Waterloo. (It must be one of the few times an English company took advice from a foreign railway?) Much later the Ifracombe line gained heavier rail, and the “Ifracombe Goods” became a popular asset for various light railways, the Colonel Stephen’s Museum site doing a handy words and music article on them: https://colonelstephenssociety.co.uk/light railway modelling/light railway modelling - ilfracombe goods.html Now here’s a funny thing. There’s a variety of plastic storage boxes which had stuff crammed in them Willy Nilly before my house move, and I’m slowly trying to make head or tail of it all. I knew there was some small American C&W items in the Continental C&W box, which I’ve turfed out and put in the right box, but then down in the bottom of this box I spotted an old chassis I was doing twenty or more years back, a 6’ 4-6-0, which isn’t the sort of thing I’m into now. Get it out and see what could be done, and do you know, the wheelbase is within 4” of an Ifracombe goods, and I’m not going to start a fight about that. Any 4’6” drivers around? None in the wheel store but there’s some in the projects box, and the 6’ drivers will be most useful in other projects. The frames are a bit deep, take a 4mm strip off along the top so the platform can sit lower, trim the extension over the lead bogie off and a bit of a scallop underneath. Re drill the pickup guide holes and fit plastic tubes in, and touch up the paint. There we are… Where to now? Sweden? LSWR? Colonel Stephens? I fancy all or any of them, but there’s no back up rolling stock been made for any, so the chassis will have to go back into the queue waiting superstructures. It does have much more potential now than it did have.
  14. It looks like hoops either side of the centre door to support sheets, quite a rare arrangement.
  15. Happy Easter, Annie, here’s a feel good picture, the Brixham branch train (with a fish van) coming into Churston.
  16. Not quite a steam roller wheel, but there’s a bit of meat.
  17. Theres two aspects strike me, first off the bogies are mounted in ball and socket joints, with no allowance for any sideways movement. This means any sideways displacement on a curve has to be met by the driving wheels, and any movement there looks to be blocked by the suspension arrangement. Hence the need for flangeless drivers, but the tyres don’t look especially wide. It must have been very tricky to run over any restricted point work. Then there’s the rubber suspension, which looks as if it’s applied to the bogie wheels as well. Getting the weight distribution set up is bad enough on an ordinary engine with leaf springs and adjustable nuts on the spring hangers, quite how it was done on this one would be a challenge, to put it mildly.
  18. Pre WW1, surely? Best route, from Paddington to Fishguard, then there’s an overnight boat to Waterford, not the Rosslare route, pretty run up the estuary to Adelphi Wharf, then direct to Tipperary. She will end up as “Becky” anyway.
  19. And if I got it right, it’s 7mm? One single point, one three way point, no more? I think you can now settle down to have a happy and contented old age.
  20. “If you see something that doesn’t look right……”
  21. Oh, right, there’s me thinking… https://www.bart5.com/bar-t-5-home/
×
×
  • Create New...