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MrWolf

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Posts posted by MrWolf

  1. 13 hours ago, Fair Oak Junction said:

     

    The "Flying Scrapheap" nickname is something I've heard people use for a long time, and I don't see it as that much more insulting than many nicknames given to locomotives/classes.

    Pretty sure some locos over the years have been given monikers that I'm not even allowed to type on here 😄

    Edit: Also concern feels a bit strong, it's just a tongue in cheek way of describing a locomotive. Not like I'm actually calling for it to be scrapped 😉

     

    "Flying Money pit" is the one I've heard the most. But any steam locomotive that is owned and operated by a single person or a small group will be. They were built and operated by big businesses.

     

    My concern and the reason for giving FS the "Flying Backwards" moniker is that quite a few irreplaceable locomotives have been damaged when enthusiasm has overidden experience. Do we remember when 532 Blue Peter nearly got written off with smashed valve gear and twisted axles?

     

    It's no surprise that the NRM doesn't let Mallard out to play anymore. Somebody might just try finding out how fast she really is. 

     

    When Scotsman got into that collision I thought that's it, she won't be out anymore and it may well be the end of main line steam. It's bad enough that operators are now being forced to idiot proof the old carriages.

     

    Lots of things have rather odd nicknames, it doesn't mean that they're disliked, have a look at military slang sometime.

    A friend of mine has a veteran BSA sidecar combination which has always been known as "The Oil Monster" because of its total loss lubrication system. Another has a very rare Morris Marina Deluxe known as "The Marinator" because the paint colour is best described as chicken tikka.

    Years ago I had a battered old 1959 Bedford pickup truck known as "The Nasty", the name actually came from when a pair of reprobates tried stealing my Hovawart* dog out of it and it didn't end too good for them. It retained the name even after a full chassis off restoration.

     

    The Scotsman is a wonderful old piece of machinery, something that keeps steam locomotives in the minds of all those weird people who aren't interested railways, does anyone think that I haven't had any stick about my name over the years? 😄 

     

    *Hovawart: From the old German for "Yard Watcher", a bear like breed of dog used by farmers to scare off wolves and intruders. Loyal, playful and generally laid back, but not something you would want to upset.

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  2. You'd definitely get away with that on a prewar layout. The bike is fitted with girder forks, (Two sets of thin tubes going down to the front wheel, rather than one thick one each side) BSA stopped fitting those at the end of 1946, going over to a telescopic fork until the end in 1973.

     

    1941-bsa-w-m20_2.jpg.4b13f524ba552e8ab24077cdf661bb0b.jpg

    National motorcycle museum

     

     

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  3. 1 hour ago, Limpley Stoker said:

    So what colour is paraquat weathering?

     

    Paraquat is actually a suitably terrifying bright green, but it wasn't discovered until about 1950 and came into use in 1962.

     

    Around 1932, the first synthetic weedkiller appeared in the US, 2 - methyl - 4, 6 - Dinitrophenol. 

    Other synthetic weedkillers were developed during the second world war, but for the UK in the late l930s the most likely is Sodium Chloride.

     

    Basically salting the ground using a very strong salt solution suspended in water. Which would explain the lack of gloves and gas masks worn by the operators. 

     

     

     

     

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  4. It's been a busy six months for me, so the almost complete autocoach project has taken a bit of a back seat.

    But it is now in the queue on the recently tidied Bench of Bodge and is glowering at me from the corner.

    I feel a bit guilty having got so far with it, especially as @MAP66 has ploughed ahead with his and is now upgrading the loco.

    I think that it's time to get it finished and give my modelling mojo a kick up the derriere.

     

    I also have the Shawplan glazing kit, fitting that will be a first for me.

     

     

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  5. I would have thought freight grey too, though obviously I couldn't confirm it.

     

    Logically the Great Western had plentiful supplies of the stuff, the train is made mostly from items off the Swindon dump and spent it's time scuttling about killing weeds.

     

    I can't imagine them wasting cash on a special livery for something like that.

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  6. 6 hours ago, peterm1 said:

    Claud Butler bikes. Myself and my mates always wanted one of those. Centre pull brakes and Campag' gears. Never happened though.

     

    My father bought one of the early ones with metallic red paint, chromed forks and 4 speed BSA pattern derailleur gears, it cost him £27 back in 1954 which must have been an absolute fortune. It lived in the front room of my grandparents house, as even then, fancy bicycles tended to walk.

     

    I had a Vindec with Campagnolo fittings and Weinmann centre pull brakes I used on time trials, followed by a Peugeot Clubman that I still have, although it's become a real woodsman's axe over time!

     

     

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  7. Early model of New Imperial, very nice and a rare sight now. My father's first bike was a rather dog eared 1936 model bought for £2 in 1956 or 57, like the one below, I've still got the green log book for it somewhere.

     

    It's a typical prewar commuter bike of which there should be one or more on any layout from 1930-60.

    image.jpeg.8c47251fcd2d77710f29f9340894bf70.jpeg

    Image: Bonham's 

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  8. 57 minutes ago, The White Rabbit said:

     

    I don't know about the historical accuracy ( @MrWolf, @KNP  and others might comment?) but there's https://www.artitecshop.com/en/vehicles/h0-187/ready-made/motorcycles/ and https://www.artitecshop.com/en/anwb-roadside-assistance-motorcycle-sidecar-with-f.html - very nicely detailed but two snags I see, they are 1:87 scale (though a touch of forced perspective if you used them close to the back of a layout?) and not cheap.  

     

     

    The little veteran NSU is a thing of beauty and despite being a pre Great War design, could pass for anything made between about 1903-28 and plenty were still around in the late thirties because they were easy to maintain.

    Of the others, the Triumph with girder forks will pass for any of their single cylinder bikes made between 1930-46. The BMW R75 was originally made for the Wehrmacht and civilian production isn't thought to have taken place until 1946. The R25 entered production until 1950. 

    The American bikes look like Harley Davidsons with the "Knucklehead" engine that was used 1939-48, 

    The rest are from the 50s, 60s and 70s, most of which, such as the Zundapp were imported into the UK in reasonable quantities, having dealer networks established to provide support to owners.

     

    A very interesting selection and thanks for sharing.

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  9. 2 minutes ago, Tim Dubya said:

     

    Absolutely mate.  I'm in the middle of a "health scare" ATM, just waiting for test results.  I've been off work with a dodgy back too (this has been quite difficult as I didn't disclose my back condition to my new employer when I started, as I was supposed too but I was desperate to leave my last job with honour... or not get sacked for too much sickness) but this has given me the opportunity to get my toys out and get on with some stickin' & gluin' , so all good.

     

     

    Not good, I hope that you are on the mend soon. I trapped a nerve in my lower back once, it actually scared me more than other far worse incidents because I'd be doing something and without warning it felt like all the wires had been cut and my legs gave way. It lasted about two weeks until I woke up one morning and it had sorted itself out as though it had never happened. It was very weird.

     

    2 minutes ago, Ian Hargrave said:

     

    Having had a close encounter during open heart surgery a couple of years ago,I truly am

     

    I had a close encounter with the man in black once too. Some poor devil stood on something that went bang and I woke up three days later having had treatment for my injuries and sepsis from foreign bone fragments. 

    That made me slightly blasé about my recent health scare, but I didn't realise how much it had played on my mind until I got the all clear.

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  10. 3 minutes ago, Dunsignalling said:

    And to paraphrase Oscar Wilde:

     

    There's only one thing worse than getting old, and that's not getting old.....

     

     

    Absolutely right. I was only saying the other day that of the five lads who became friends in secondary school and sixth form, there was only two of us left by the age of fifty. Two died in car crashes and one from a stroke.

     

    There's me sometimes thinking that I made a hash of being a grown up, flying around on motorbikes and going off working in places that are on nobody's gap year bucket list and generally doing stupid things.

    Then realised I should be grateful for the life I have.

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  11. Rotring pens, now that's a blast from the past. My last one went MIA over twenty years ago, marvellous things for making line drawings and  illustrations as well as technical drawings. 

    I'm too heavy handed now for the modern fibre tipped version, plus they don't last five minutes.

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  12. 3 hours ago, 1466 said:

    I found the airflow around my 1966 Midget drastically changed at 50 mph . Below 50 I could sit in a warm air on winter nights with the hood down. Above 50 the cold air came rushing in . The same was true with rain which would get blown over the windscreen but  at a critical speed would be blown into the “cockpit”. 

     

    Ditto 1968 Triumph Spitfire. Winding both side windows up seemed to make it worse!

     

     

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  13. 4 minutes ago, MarshLane said:

     

    Either way I am sure @Modelu Chris would be interested in 3D scanning for their offering .. although I admit I am not sure if there are any bikes or whether the 3D printing could commodate the fine detail around wheel spokes etc.  Food for thought maybe?

     

    You would, as other makers have done, need to manipulate the computer model to make the rims and tyres attached to the mudguards at various points to support them. I doubt that you could print a spoke of around 1/8" Ø at 4mm scale.

     

    The art of compromise and all that. It would be a great project though!

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  14. There were a lot more bikes in daily use rather than weekend toys in the twenties and thirties and also a lot more women riding than now too. 

     

    There's a few white metal ones out there, but most are not particularly good, I don't think the sculptors could get the details or the engineering at such a scale.  

     

    There's a few decent ones that can be detailed with work because they are real old stagers:

     

    https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/153521759358?

     

    But there's odd things to be aware of like riders wearing helmets, something that doesn't really take off until about 1960 and not mandatory until the early seventies.

     

    There's a very good BSA M20 in one of the Airfix RAF bomber re-supply set, but it's 1:72 and a tiny part of a big kit. 

     

    There's the old standby of the two bikes from the RAF recovery set, again 1:72 but the riders are moulded on and both giving a right hand turn signal. At least they work at a junction as static figures.

     

     

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