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Single Line Halt - named! Niwbwrch


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  • RMweb Gold

Hi all,

 

I seem to be increasingly lurking here recently instead of my old regular haunt 'Layout topics'.

 

Inspired by many of the great efforts on here I have decided to take a break from my other layouts and freshen my mind with a micro. I have plenty of spare track, wood, underlay, scenics, buildings, etc laying around from 10 years of overspend collecting - and the opportunity arrived when my daughter re-modelled her bedroom. She had no need for an old shelf and I had it in my spare pile of wood waiting for inspiration.

 

I've toyed with several ideas but I like the idea of a simple single line, halt and bridge with the track raised off the baseboard surface.

 

Here is the shelf - nice and thick and just over 3 feet by 8 inches. It looks warped in the second photo - but it is not:

20190812_120438.jpg.d629976408dcb7b16572a00bac257e5f.jpg  20190812_120453.jpg.9909d21d806bf2ec8efc176c487dadb9.jpg 

 

I've raided the scrap bin and got some 6mm ply for the back and sides - I like my layouts to be a 3D picture so I will add a fascia cut to the front land profile later and add a lighting pelmet (is that spelt right?).

I have angled the sides up to the lighting bar height, and you can see the 'level' of track that I am planning.

I want to use a wills girder bridge on the left, with trees/shrubs hiding the exit - on the right the platform will be behind the track and I think I will have a road overbridge with a path down to the weathered old shelter. A river/stream will run under the bridge.

The last picture shows the feet I have added to the bottom of the shelf - not my best photo!

20190813_135112.jpg.20dae5ec671d73919f757da7686f212c.jpg  20190813_135116.jpg.0b4156d7d9975f9e0b620afe96004938.jpg

 

20190813_135121.jpg.f5155c866224d1c90f1efa9efd46532b.jpg   20190813_135126.jpg.458d9b614b1e139636eb3cb10bbd85ef.jpg

 

 

Thats it for now.

 

All the best,

James

 

Edited by jamest
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  • RMweb Gold

Hi,

 

I didn't mention the fiddle yards in my first post - because I've not decided how I will run them yet. They will probably start out as simple 'fiddle sticks' for 'testing' purposes. Further on I will have to decide on traverser/sector plate/cassettes or a fan of points - I'm thinking I only need three roads each end.

 

I ended up using cassettes on a previous layout of the same style (Braybridge) after initially using a traverser and sector plate. I found that swapping the locos from front to back was fiddly with the mk1 fiddle yards and cassettes meant I did not have to touch anything.

 

Perhaps I will use a cassette for the loco hauled road and use a simple siding for the DMU road.

 

cheers,

James

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  • RMweb Gold

Hi all,

 

Here are some images showing the track support glued and screwed down and the bridge sides resting in place.

 

I have some SMP track that I'd like to use - I was experimenting with the accompanying plastic point kits from marcway, but I'm not sure about the long lasting quality of my build - hence the pointless layout!

 

20190824_152845.jpg.b57617547c0f31223c2bb4fcf4a86d49.jpg  20190824_152901.jpg.1a59dae25e5a54cc670c0822ca634b1c.jpg20190824_152920.jpg.b5ead45fffdfd6cd678cd769f6fe66b4.jpg

 

Cheers,

James

Edited by jamest
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  • RMweb Gold
5 minutes ago, Stubby47 said:

Is it too late to introduce a gentle S curve into the track?

 

Yes! :laugh:

 

I see your point - I would normally slant the track or curve it, but I don't have a lot of depth and the parallel track is almost a must.

 

I will try my best to disguise it and draw attantion away from it.

 

Regards,

James

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  • RMweb Gold

Hi all,

 

One of the reasons I did not take up Stubbies advice is I had already moved on a little and glued down the track.

 

Here is a catch up....

 

I have used tracklay a few times on layouts - upside down and the right way up! I believe it gives the best effects adhesive side up with thinner sleepers - thats not to say it looks bad with thicker sleepers such as code 100 - I just think it is more suited to thinner sleepers such as the SMP track I'll use here.

 

So I laid out the tracklay sticky side up and placed the track on top - this is the full 'one and a bit' lengths for the whole scenic length - I have sprayed the track with sleeper grime and the track join will be hidden under the bridge plating:

20190826_121007.jpg.7d88a04dea9756b37d3a21cf8e45114a.jpg   20190826_121015.jpg.77cb15fd6d717d84a550e9b49db5eb84.jpg

 

Then spread the ballast on top (woodland scenics medium grey):

   20190826_121400.jpg.8603d095b35cce44451918e46c68dfc2.jpg

 

Then turn upside down and hey presto:

20190826_121614.jpg.795b26fc263f75f27d576e0c94035559.jpg

 

The track is then glued down using copydex:

20190826_121910.jpg.112ef48ddae3803c75ee61e3eda8e38f.jpg 

 

No tinned tomatos, spaghetti hoops or pineapple on the menu tonight!

20190826_122305.jpg.785bc9947ba049ce31b85f419b2de2c8.jpg

 

Cheers,

James

 

 

Edited by jamest
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  • RMweb Gold

hi,

 

I like picking actual places, or blends of actual names, from around North Devon - even if they were not actually served by rail in any way.

 

I'm leaning towards 'Hiscott' - my son's girlfriend comes from there and I like the sound of it.

 

Regards,

James

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  • RMweb Gold
3 minutes ago, Lamaziere said:

Well done. Very inspiring. Where did you find the bridge ? Sorry if you already wrote it some where in your topic.

 

Thanks.

 

The bridge is:

WILLS SS49 OO SCALE DECKED GIRDER BRIDGE

 

I got it from a local shop - it shouldn't be hard to find.

 

Regards,

James

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  • RMweb Gold

Hi all,

 

Started to build up the terrain around the track - I plan to use up a platfrom kit I have lying around. Still not 100% on what will go under the bridge - water or road. Whichever it is I will bend it a little before it hits the back-scene to make the end of the world a little less obvious.

20190906_202010.jpg.48f82991bf3f79595212bf1c7a042b9c.jpg

 

20190906_201957.jpg.e34d2348223a37390603bcc8ae6879bf.jpg

 

I've also made a start on the overbridge for the other end - it will rest on the platform and suggest the platform edge is off scene. I will cover it in cream brick papers from scalescenes.

 

20190913_170343.jpg.e2860b63fdf3c7c7563a2fabc1885766.jpg

 

20190913_170350.jpg.d74df0585af06a22f17334489a457c1d.jpg

 

20190913_173334.jpg.4f98ff8a9c2d3917e07a1312df2f2f4e.jpg

 

20190913_173346.jpg.fddbaf49745131c9688d349df17e66a7.jpg

 

Regards,

James

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Looks like an excellent little diorama so far.

I think the underbridge lends itself more to crossing a road. A rutted farm track/unmade road might be best; softer than a tarmacadam road, but blending into the (very neat!) square stone abuntments more naturally than a river would. Whatever you do I would avoid a solid road, as there will already be one over the track at the right-hand end.

Speaking of which; the minute I saw the station overbridge, I thought of Bidford-on-Avon on The Stratford-upon-Avon & Midland Junction Railway. It had a similarly positioned two-arch bridge, with the second arch used to form the small booking office on the platform. There are some good pictures on WarwickshireRailways.com: http://warwickshirerailways.com/lms/bidforduponavon.htm

It's an unusual design that I think might work well here, albeit mirrored from the original. It helps keep the rural feel of the whole layout, by leaving the majority of the platform fairly plain and open.

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  • RMweb Gold

Hi TechnicArrow,

 

Some great advice there - I was leaning towards a road but I was worried about the double road in quick succession you mention above. A rough track, or un-made road sounds good. A river/stream was going to be more difficult to blend with the back-scene.

 

I know roughly what I want from this but I always hit stages where I need to stop and think because my overall plan needs a bit of detail. I've hit such a place here but your link to Bidford-on-Avon has provided a great deal of inspiration and solutions to some of my thoughts. I have actually clad the bridge in stone (the pictures here need to catch up), but it would be easy to adjust (the beauty of card and paper) to suit the prototype you have suggested. The vertical lines on the bridge face in the last picture above show where pillars are so any door/window in the bridge face would have to be further in - but it could definitely work. I also like the overall look of Bidford with the shelter/store it really does look similar to my minds eye of what I wanted - spooky. How Bidford sits in the landscape is also very useful as I plan my mirror image of undergrowth and landscape.

 

My time frame will be 60s/70s and maybe a little later so it would be run down with the facilities closed and a lone battered shelter.

 

Thanks for taking the time to post and point me in that direction - thats the beauty of RMweb...and the people who use it.

 

Regards,

James

Edited by jamest
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  • RMweb Gold

Hi all,

 

I mentioned above that I had already clad the bridge when TechnicArrow suggested Bidford-on-Avon - and here are the photos.

 

Since the post I've poured over my options for inserting a waiting room or store room in the brickwork under the road - but I think it might not be possible as it stands as I would like to have a more traditional angled retaining wall so I can put greenery behind it to blend with the back scene. I did consider taking it apart and re-cladding it without the pillars right to the floor/platform surface - that would bring the 'room in the bridge' towards the track a little - but I have decided against it. The Bidford-on-Avon pictures will still provide inspiration and guidance on how the track, bridge and platform will blend into the landscape.

 

So here is the bridge clad in scalescenes papers - dark red brick in a helical pattern on the inside of the arch - cream brick for the main structure:

 

20190913_203821.jpg.05f45ef6fc602042b03ce2ea12330a7a.jpg

 

I used the template from my scalescenes tunnel portal to mark out the bridge opening and arch

20190913_203904.jpg.ba812f605f0006fafe55959fafa4835e.jpg

 

20190913_203919.jpg.f202e9c32520519c7484751b0c4540ba.jpg

 

You can see with the finished bridge that I don't really have the depth to add a waiting/storage room under the road.

20190915_150302.jpg.7930cffa94f3042424b7f38dede51c0c.jpg

 

20190915_150319.jpg.1f71f9c70950f8e007611fdcf59e6339.jpg

 

Next job is to fit a fascia on the front so that I can form the terrain against it. I will fill in the gaps with paper and cover in plaster bandage.

 

Thats all for now,

Cheers,

James

Edited by jamest
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  • RMweb Gold

Hi all,

 

Thanks for the 'likes'.

 

I have fited the front fascia.

 

I decided to buy a piece of 6mm ply for this as I didn't have a scrap piece that would do the job in one go. I have made the side walls thick enough to help disguise the exit points and made sure you can't look straight down the road at the right into the backscene. There is a bit of 18mm X 44mm along the top (that the five screws go into) of the front to support the front better. The rest is glued and pinned.

 

A view showing the overall effect well.

20190926_190121.jpg.34f883b8503331afcdb340548bcf3f6f.jpg

 

20190926_190126.jpg.ae9f9a3292eb85feafe12ad34800568d.jpg

 

There will be an angled retaining wall from the brige down onto the platform - I think the platform access will be from behind the platform in some way - steps down from the road would take up too much room I think - but noting is definate yet!

20190926_190132.jpg.a28308f28bc59b89a172d94dd94af4d0.jpg

 

20190926_190142.jpg.50bd9c7704eedc311274b043aec706f6.jpg

 

There will be some tress/bushes to obscure the exit this end

20190926_190152.jpg.6868947ad5e2f0ee8a47c9deb15559ee.jpg

 

Next job is to sand and paint the platform and fix it in place so I can landscape and finish the ballasting.

 

Cheers,

James

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  • 4 months later...

James - this is all looking so neat and well put together that I hesitate to make a suggestion, as everything looks well advanced...

 

It struck me that you could have a canal running under the rail overbridge: by modelling lock gates hard up against the backscene, you could suggest the canal dropping down to pass under the railway and also thereby disguise the join to the backscene with a plausible vertical view blocker (the lock gate). (I think a brewery Inglenook has used a photo of a flight of locks under a rail bridge to similar effect.)

 

That would give you an opportunity to model a "wet" surface to contrast with your road, but at the same time prototypically narrow/straight!

 

Steve S

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  • RMweb Gold

Hi all,

 

Thanks for the kind words - I haven't made much progress over christmas - but I plan to push on soon and get it finished (if anything ever is actually finished).

 

The canal suggestion is a good one - the main sticking point for me at the moment is how I blend the land around the end of the platform and how the current road blends in with that and the back scene. I have laid a road and some grass but nothing that can't be changed yet. I will give it some thought.

 

regards,

James

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