colin smith
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Location
Oxfordshire
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Interests
Railway interests: 19th Century modelling, narrow-gauge, non-British outline preferred, unusual prototypes and might-have-beens.
Other interests: writing and photography.
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Locomotion Models Exclusive Flying Scotsman models
colin smith replied to AY Mod's topic in Locomotion Models
I like Armitage but I admit this isn't the literary equivalent of JMW Turner's 'Rain, Steam and Speed'. But how often do steam engines get poems written about them? -
So far as I could tell, the Britannia and Evening Star are displayed next to each other so while the former is in shot when SK is talking about the Immingham fish trains he's actually standing between them and referring to the loco behind his back.
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Where was the last steam hauled freight on BR?
colin smith replied to montyburns56's topic in UK Prototype Questions
Presumably the Vale of Rheidol Railway was running steam-hauled ballast trains, etcetera, up until it was privatised in 1989. -
1960 was quite late for a British WW2 film seeking to document an actual event from the war, albeit with some factual liberties. After that there was often greater Hollywood involvement and events were increasingly elaborated on or wholly invented (The Great Escape, Heroes of Telemark, 633 Squadron, etc) and from the late 60s ostensibly WW2 Hollywood films were influenced by events in Vietnam and became more about the waste and futility of war as seen from the combatants’ perspective rather than banging the nation’s drum. Looking back, post-war British films like Battle of the River Plate, The Dambusters, Sink the Bismark, The Wooden Horse, and the rest, seem quaint. Perhaps even more archaic than the events they depict. They were as much about post-war national myth-making as war-time reality and if as a child I accepted that myth without questioning I would grow to question it and then despise it. Today I could only tolerate a war film with the premise that war is collective insanity rather than as something glorious with clear moral distinctions between good and bad.
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Pre Grouping general discussion
colin smith replied to Graham_Muz's topic in Pre-Grouping - Modelling & Prototype
Unfortunately, I'm some way from starting as my bedsit doesn't have room. This is an idea for the future. But having been a OO9 modeller many years ago I have to dispute that it's easier, not least because all the tricky mechanical bits are that much smaller! Tbh, if I had any children/grandchildren, I would have kept them outside the railway door. I do have a plan for what I want to build when the time is right. Standard gauge in black, narrow-gauge in grey. Cambrian coast line overbridge bottom right. Road along the bottom. Coal store served by narrow and standard gauge on the right. Talyllyn platform bottom left with passenger shelter. Talyllyn Railway office far left. Cambrian sidings and the foreshore beyond with the sea on the backscene. Cassette fiddlesticks to left and right. -
Pre Grouping general discussion
colin smith replied to Graham_Muz's topic in Pre-Grouping - Modelling & Prototype
A Dukedog could work for a late 1930s layout but by then the slate quarries at Abergynolwyn were long past their best. I have noted that Camkits do OO kits for the Cambrian small and large goods 0-6-0s, which is pretty much all the idea would need, along with open wagons and cattle wagons. That said, O gauge would be better as the Talyllyn is much better provided for in O.16.5. -
Pre Grouping general discussion
colin smith replied to Graham_Muz's topic in Pre-Grouping - Modelling & Prototype
For you, no doubt. I was a professional architectural modeller for twelve years and a picture framer for several more years so I'm not averse to making things, but the engineering aspect of model railways doesn't interest me and I'd rather put the energy into the creative and imaginative aspects. Also, life is too short to acquire the skills needed to produce the relatively few items I would want to a standard I would accept. The particular bit of Cambrian that interests me is the Aberdovey harbour branch which, in my reimagining, would also have been the terminus of the 2'3" gauge Talyllyn Railway* but it really can't be done without one or two Cambrian locos. *The initial proposal for the Talyllyn was for a line from the slate quarries at Abergynolwyn to Aberdovey but once the standard gauge reached Towyn they decided to build an interchange with the Cambrian. Much of the slate went via the Cambrian to the harbour at Aberdovey. -
Pre Grouping general discussion
colin smith replied to Graham_Muz's topic in Pre-Grouping - Modelling & Prototype
A question. Given its route mileage and character is the Cambrian Railway unusually ill-provided for by model manufacturers compared to companies like the SE&CR, the Midland, and the LSWR, among others. I can't think of a single rtr loco, carriage, or wagon in OO or O. -
How much compression is too much for you?
colin smith replied to Kris's topic in Modelling Questions, Help and Tips
If you're querying the accuracy of the map then it should be possible to find this detail on the National Library of Scotland's database. https://maps.nls.uk/geo/find/#zoom=5&lat=56.00000&lon=-4.00000&layers=298&b=10&z=0&point=0,0 Then, if anything on the map survives today, such as the row of terraced houses on the right, you can find it on Google streetview and double check the dimensions, e.g., by counting the bricks across a house frontage or by using the Measure Distance feature which measures a straight line between two points. All you need is one known dimension and you can work out everything else. -
How much compression is too much for you?
colin smith replied to Kris's topic in Modelling Questions, Help and Tips
That's caricature for me. It's just too crowded and far too twee. -
How much compression is too much for you?
colin smith replied to Kris's topic in Modelling Questions, Help and Tips
I know when it looks right on a model and I know when it looks wrong, but the main thing is the level of compression varies wildly depending on what is being compressed. As a rough rule of thumb, maybe: 0% for individual locos and items of rolling stock. 30-40% for train length. 10-30% for building footprints, with larger buildings being compressed more. 30-50% for the distances between buildings, albeit with attention paid to sightlines. 30-50% for the track arrangement. Obviously, you can compress a lot more than that but to my eyes the results often end up looking like caricatures rather than the 'real thing'. One other detail. The level of acceptable compression partly depends on how much head waggling you need to take in the layout. The more head waggling the larger the layout will feel.