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Rabs

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  1. Well, I go away for a few days and look what happens... I return after a brief hiatus (cough, 10 years, cough) and things certainly seem to have changed around rmweb. Looks like I need to replace a load of photos. Anyway, I got Bath out the other day and started doing some modelling. All the boards are now assembled and track plans down
  2. I stick one of these on the tube: http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/110x-Liquid-Dispenser-Solder-Paste-Adhesive-Glue-Dispensing-Needle-Tip-11Types-/252202844560?hash=item3ab8760190:g:H9cAAOSwwE5WZV9C or these: http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/60pcs-TT-Blunt-Glue-Liquid-Dispenser-Dispensing-Needle-Plastic-Tapered-Tips-/191929551814?hash=item2cafe48bc6:g:Wv4AAOSwARZXk4eO At a few pence each I just replace them when they get blocked.
  3. Sounds like you've got a solution but another utility program to be aware of is MeshLab (http://www.meshlab.net/). It has some useful features and can import/export a wide range of file formats. It's a useful one to add to the toolbox.
  4. I don't think that is a particularly important feature if you are printing small objects. If you had a print that was going to take hours and lots of expensive material then it might be a concern but most small scale models will only take an hour or two and use a few pence of filament so it's not the end of the world if you run out and you won't run out very often with small prints. Features like reliable bed levelling, heated bed and a good quality extruder hot end are all much more important to good FDM printing in my opinion. However, my concern is that the OP might have unrealistic expectations of the print quality they will get from an FDM printer so I'm hoping that they will come back and give some more detail about what they want to achieve.
  5. Hi, I didn't spot this thread when it started. Can you both give some more detail about what you want to achieve with a 3d printer, in what scale and what level of detail you hope to achieve? A <£1000 3d printer will be very good at some things but completely unsuitable for others so we need a bit more information to provide good advice.
  6. Can't speak for why Green Park/Queen Square was changed but the logic for changing the GW station seems fairly clear to me: It could have been quite ambiguous to have simply 'Bath' on a timetable with more than one station in Bath, particularly when the station in question was the smaller of the two. Anyway, I'm getting off topic
  7. It became Bath Spa in 1949, if my research is correct. I guess that it might have been to do with consolidation of timetables in the early years after nationalisation. Multiple Bath stations appearing in the same timetables was probably thought to cause confusion that hadn't occurred before when they were run by independent companies.
  8. Good to know, thanks. Yes, I do get through the carbide drills quite quickly when I'm doing PCB work compared to drilling plastics.
  9. Didn't Trotsky use to be in that picture?
  10. Out of curiosity, what's the reason for using a paxolin board instead of a standard fibreglass core? I'm making some of my track with FR4 and am now worried I might be missing something that will come back to bite me later.
  11. Could somebody add "4mm" to the thread title? This n gauger just got a dose of dashed hope!
  12. If it's not an urgent requirement I believe that fiNetrax are launching code 40 flat bottom rail (visually quite similar to 2FS trackwork) later this year. This thread on NGF is where quite a lot of the updates on how things are developing get announced: http://www.ngaugeforum.co.uk/SMFN/index.php?topic=3280.0
  13. Back to your original question Hawk, I think the error results from the picture being taken from a vertical position which isn't exactly level with the middle of the box. Your horizon line appears to be below the centres of the vertical black lines you have added on the vertical edges of the box. If the horizon isn't in the middle then your assumption of 2 point perspective isn't quite right and it introduces the error. Either you need to retake the picture with the camera at exactly the right height or you need to do extend your method to use a 3 point perspective to correct for the position of the camera. I think that, like the others have suggested, I'd reach for a computer at this point!
  14. ... yet. Why not give it a go? You can always remove the paint if you're not happy with the result. A lovely model like that deserves better than nakedness
  15. In the case of 3d printers cost and ease of use aren't necessarily correlated. You can get robust, easy to use 3d printers with plenty of user support for a fairly low cost. Equally you can get fiddly, fussy and poorly documented printers for a high cost. If you want a good starter printer I would look for a well respected name (such as the metal Printerbot simple or a good Prusa i3 kit). You can keep the cost down by compromising on print size, speed and skipping features such as a heated bed while still getting a reliable machine. But then, for model trains in smaller scales, I probably wouldn't be buying an FDM printer quite yet. I'd make do with shapeways/imaterialise for another couple of years until the quality gets a bit better.
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