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The Stonethwaite and Bainrigg Railway


Richard Mawer
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BUILDINGS START

 

Being 7mm and a wharf, there are not too many buildings required. But we need a row of warehouses and workshops. Building has begun. They still need adapting to specific locations etc and much detailing and weathering.

 

The loco shed will be in stone, slate and timber and have a timber and corrugated iron lean-to. It has been extended to house the larger locos acquired by the line after the original 2. There will be suitably “home-spun” opening doors added to the “home spun” front extension. Its all seen better times!

 

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On 18/11/2019 at 17:30, Neal Ball said:

Looking very interesting @Richard Mawer this is going to be a great layout.

Thank you Neal. We hope so!

 

I’m in the process of wiring up and making locos and accessories. Michael is building stock, stock and more stock. Dave is planning the Fiddle yard and making legs.

 

We have 2 exhibition invitations for June and November 2020, so the pressure is on. Thank heavens we designed it to be modular so we can do it in stages.

 

We had a good session on Buckingham West tonight as a bit of light relief! Not enough has happened on that lately, but we need to get the S & B over the threshold first. 

 

Hope its sunny and warm in Spain.

 

Cheers

 

Rich

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23 hours ago, Richard Mawer said:

 

 

We had a good session on Buckingham West tonight as a bit of light relief! Not enough has happened on that lately, but we need to get the S & B over the threshold first. 

 

 

 

I know that feeling - I'm currently trying to get 'Aberystwyth' to a convenient stopping place (all point motors fitted and wired - #48 turned out not to be fitted correctly!) before my father brings me the baseboards for 'Wallingford Mark 2' next week. Then I'll have three months to build that before the Kenavon show on 22nd February, before I can get back to Aberystwyth again. And at some point in all that, I also have some improvements I want to make to 'Where Seagulls Dare'....

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7 hours ago, RJS1977 said:

 

I know that feeling - I'm currently trying to get 'Aberystwyth' to a convenient stopping place (all point motors fitted and wired - #48 turned out not to be fitted correctly!) before my father brings me the baseboards for 'Wallingford Mark 2' next week. Then I'll have three months to build that before the Kenavon show on 22nd February, before I can get back to Aberystwyth again. And at some point in all that, I also have some improvements I want to make to 'Where Seagulls Dare'....

 

Busy boy!! Good luck with all that.

 

I’ve put your show in my diary and hope to get over. Are we still a possible for 2021?

 

Rich

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14 hours ago, Richard Mawer said:

 

Busy boy!! Good luck with all that.

 

I’ve put your show in my diary and hope to get over. Are we still a possible for 2021?

 

Rich

 

Yes, I'm still bearing you in mind for 2021 but I'll see how 2020's show goes first!

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  • 2 weeks later...
  • 3 weeks later...

ALICE

 

Loco No.2, Alice has rolled out the works.

 

7240EEA8-AC25-44BC-8187-027CA6D87CE2.jpeg.78d4e42bf5923c2c901c7bf33faf317f.jpeg

 

She still needs finishing : pipes, handrails, name plates, numbers, couplings, brass paint, crew etc, and weathering, but she runs and produces the right sounds.

 

As many will recognise, she is based on a Smallbrook Studios Iris. The kit was designed to fit a Hornby 0-4-0, but we didn’t want all 0-4-0s, so I looked for alternatives. This is from a Fleischmann 0-6-0 tank. I love the eccentric outside valve gear which gives a lazy impression when running slowly. The wheels are really small too. 

 

As the chassis is totally different from the Hornby, it would not fit the supplied frames so I built my own from 2.5mm plastic sheet, strengthened with 90 degree edge strips. They narrow at the front to reveal more of the valve gear.

 

The motor is small and very much at the rear, so the loco had to be extended. As designed, the firebox extends into the cab and the safety valve is taken up through the cab roof. By moving the front of the cab to the rear of the firebox I gained boiler length. I built a new cover for the motor in the cab with the face of the firebox stuck on it. This houses the speaker as well. Consequently there is much more space for the decoder in the boiler cavity.

 

I extended the side tanks to make small coal bunkers next to the cab.

 

Finally I removed half the rear of the cab and added brass tubes for uprights.

 

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Here she is with No.1, Grace.

 

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They are both very clearly Smallbrook products but just that bit different.

 

 

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On 03/12/2019 at 07:03, Richard Mawer said:

Left to right: Fleischmann HO, Smallbrook Studio, unknown off Ebay (any ideas?) and KB Scale.

Hi Richard, the unknown one looks like a Bachmann 0n30 model.

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POINTS IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION

 

The servos to operate the points and signals on board 2 have been fitted. Unlike on Buckingham West where I have used strong tape to hold the servos in place, for this layout we wanted something more capable of withstanding the moves. We have used MERG 3d printed servo mounts. They are cheap, very easy to put together, well designed and seem secure and robust. I am so far impressed.

 

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I have a running session on Buckingham West tomorrow, so had to move the S&B board out the way. I couldn’t resist placing Grace and Alice on the tracks for the first time!

 

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BOARD 2 STAGE 1 COMPLETE

 

Board 2 of the Wharf is now complete in terms of track, electrics and uncouplers.

 

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The track feeds are in and my first ever DCC loco has tested it all. Points are all operating using servos in MERG mountings driven by MERG electronic kits. The frogs are switched by the second pole of DPDT switches - nice and low tech to de-risk for exhibition use.

 

The frogs in the diamond are switched by two poles of a 4 pole switch. Another pole operates a servo which will swing a gate across either the line to the canal (the large rectangular opening) wharf, or the loco shed line, depending on how the frogs are set. This gives a very real indication of how the frogs are polarised to avoid shorts.

 

The gate and signals are yet to go in.

 

The switches loose. They will be set on small boards and accessed through holes in the backscene. This will prevent them from protruding and therefore reduce e risk of damage in transport. All the switches and holes will be obscured by the low relief warehouses ranged across the rear.

 

The buildings are under construction by Dave and Michael.

 

There are two types of uncouplers fitted. The fixed type are a series of 3mm diameter rod magnets inserted between the sleepers just inside each rail. The poles are opposite for each rail. Its an idea I got off YouTube and works well on the kadees. On the main running lines I was advised to avoid fixed magnets. I looked at electro-magnets but getting opposite poles on each side seemed difficult and the Kadee version was expensive so in my own Heath Robinson type brain (and conscious of technology always working fine till at an exhibition!) I opted for a Kadee undertrack magnet fitted to a hinged plate. This swings vertically away from the board under normal use and has no effect on couplings. However, by pulling a string attached to the hinged plate and running through eyelets, through the rear of the board, the magnet swings up into a cut-away under the track and operates the couplings. Releasing the string, the weight of the magnet causes it to drop away.

 

The next job on this board is to build up the ground cover up to rail height and cover up the oo track.

 

Time to swap boards and for me to start on board 1.

 

Rich

Edited by Richard Mawer
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  • 2 weeks later...

THE FIRST CUT IS THE DEEPEST

 

The canal is an important feature on the layout. In the fictional back story it is the reason the line was built. On the layout it provides 3 working features:- 2 moving boats and somewhere for the tipper wagons to tip their loads.

 

The design is very lo-fi and simple in concept. Magnets below the canal are pulled by strings and magnets in the boats mean they follow along on top of the water. The tricky bit is getting the right magnets, correct “tracks” for the magnets and correct clearances. It took hours!!!

 

Bridges over canals were made as narrow as possible for cost reasons. Anyone who has been on a narrowboat will testify. So even though we have 2 boats, the bridge will be only wide enough for 1. So the first boat comes through and then pulls round the dog leg and docks nearest the viewing side. I have to say I am quite smug about the way that works! The second boat comes through and docks alongside the tipping wharf. A train of tippers will then be unloaded into that boat which will depart back into the fiddleyard to be emptied.

 

I have made the canal and two boats in basic form. They need painting and detailing yet, but the whole thing works, which is a massive relief!

 

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An overview of the canal. The bridge is yet to be built, but the narrow section is in the centre. The boat is in position in the fiddle yard (under construction).

 

 

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The 1st boat in position nearest the viewing side of the layout (shown right side here) in the basin. The base of the 2nd boat is by the tipper wharf.

 

 

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The first boat unpainted.

 

 

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The second boat (unpainted). This will be filled from tipper trucks.

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  • 2 weeks later...

(UN) HINGED?

 

Back in the summer, when I was talking about making this layout with some friends, a very experienced modeller warned me against having magnets for Kadee couplings sited on mainlines. The slightest stutter and the train could split. I took it seriously and yet needed uncouplers on the mainline and the goods loop. So I devised a simple method on hide and seek for the magnets. 

 

Whilst we are using DCC Sound, other sound files, lots of moving accessories worked by servos etc, I don’t like all my eggs in the same electronic basket. I like simple old fashioned mechanics as well.

 

My method of using uncoupling magnets on the mainlines when we need them and not having them there at other times involves a Kadee under track magnet, some plastic card, a hinge and some string. Three rectangles were cut out of the baseboard before laying the track. Card was put over the holes to prevent light. The magnets were offered up into the holes and then glued to plastic card to build it up to board thickness. A longer piece of card was then hinged off the underside of the board and the magnet assembly glued on. Finally string is attached to the magnet end, passed through a screwed eyelet and through a hole at the rear of the layout.

 

In use the hinged flap hangs vertically down so the magnet is too far away and out of alignment to cause the Kadees to deflect. When you pull the string, the flap comes up and the magnet sits below the track and operates the couplings. Simples!

 

For transportation the is a simple thumb turn to hold it up and prevent flapping about.

 

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The flap hanging down, so no effect on couplings.

 

 

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Halfway up. 

 

 

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Fully up and operational.

 

 

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The position of one of the hinged magnets. 

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FILLING TIME

 

Dave is hard at work building the ground levels up to just below rail height to represent the wharf landscape.

 

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The low relief warehouses will mask the switches which will be mounted so they do not protrude (to avoid damage in transit) but are accessed via holes in the backscene.

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WHAT A RELIEF

 

Low relief warehouses are starting to appear. Michael is busy making all of them for board 2.

 

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There is a siding that disappears through what will be a working door into the middle one.

 

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I am making progress on one for board 1. There will be a working hoist from the covered protrusion. Loco No. 3 (Jane) is waiting for some final sanding and then painting.

 

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  • 2 weeks later...

No.3 Jane

 

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I was in 2 minds about posting this. Now I’m looking at the photo, the camera is cruel. I know it needs weathering down (far too bright) shining up a bit too, handrails, nameplates, safety valves coal and larger cylinders, but the painting of the frames is awful! Anyway better to know now. Oh yes and buffer beams need to be red.

 

The decoder and lights aren’t fitted yet either. So the cab is still loose.

 

The kit is a stretched Smallbrook Studios Thor with home made frames because the chassis is from a Fleishmann tank loco. Its an older model with live chassis so I had to get a replacement isolated motor coverplate.

 

So back to the paint shop I think.

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  • 3 weeks later...

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