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moore43grm

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Everything posted by moore43grm

  1. How about the "male" part of a Remembrance Day Poppy ?
  2. Look up "Yorkshire Waterways Heritage Society" they have numerous interesting photos under their "Tom Pudding" entry.
  3. A first foray into the world of using a silhouette-cut kit. Have added additional /alternative etched brass and or white metal fittings from the "stock box of spares"
  4. I'll second that, yes please. Attached photos taken from "Brookes' Industrial Railways" by S.A. Leleux, Locomotion Papers No.36 published by The Oakwood Press 1972
  5. Found these photos of my late fathers stay in the RAF c1944/47 Course booklet 1. The early trainer - Cornell 2. The advanced trainer - Harvard
  6. Is a "boat" allowed on this thread ? Found this photo whilst clearing out some of my late fathers belongings. Jesus College Cambridge Boat team c1944 There are several more similar photos to follow
  7. Nothing new on the modelling front, but looking for a suitable background and track still to ballast.
  8. I've posted this before somewhere.. Holmfield was not a small BLT but I guess the principal is the same.
  9. see R T Models 4SLK002 Manning Wardle "Class K" 0-6-0ST
  10. not the best of pictures but you get the idea !
  11. I I have a copy ( photo copy ?) of this publication and it lists alphabetically up to some 500 wagons. If I recall you had to buy the individual wagon sheet you required, yes I have several !
  12. Don't know if you have this photo in your collection, it might help ?
  13. The latest additions - the loco is from the old Impetus range and the van from Maj
  14. Continuing on with a Brookes theme, I went a bit OTT with the weathering on my latest tank wagon ,but I just had to ignore the fine print ! Sorry for the cruel close up. Kit SEFinecast tank wagon. Transfers from a set made by Railway Mania.
  15. A fine pair: Judith Edge 14" v Rapido 16"
  16. Not quite the open wagon you mean, As part of the Munitions of War Act, July 1915, shells produced in Halifax factories for the Ministry of Munitions were by no means uniform. The most common type were the small calibre: 18 Pdr, 4.5” and 6” shells. Drakes Ltd produced some 182 thousand shells, equivalent to over 5 thousand tonnes
  17. My version of the plough, side view and a front on view . I will have to try and fix that dislodged window !
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