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Ok, having another go at actually finishing a model!

 

Current plan is for a very tightly packed 7mm micro, 3'6  x 16", basic Inglenook plan, with a fiddleyard as an extra portion.

 

The Period will be early - 1840s to 1860s, with stock taken from wherever I can find small prototypes that I like - but with a flavour of the North East, and the Stockton and Darlington in particular.

 

As usual, the majority of the work will be from card, with the added twist of having a new card cutter to play with :)

 

Several elements constructed -

 

Coal drops - based on Goathland

Station Building - vaguely related to North Road Station in Darlington

 

Chaldron waggons

 

2 coaches

 

so - what do we think so far? track "plan" to follow soon

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Edited by cornamuse
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Station mostly complete - anyone know what colour Stockton and Darlington notice boards were?

 

Some rooms inside made and fitted -

The parcels office (Father Christmas Room, if you are 3, because at Head of Steam, you meet Father Christmas in the Parcels Office. The big red chair is his!)

The cash office - upstairs isn't big enough for the boardroom I wanted to show, so my wife suggested this as a more practical thing for the station to have. She was also able to tell me what I needed in there :)

 

The chaldron waggons have been a major stumbling block - I want a reasonable number of them, but getting the shape right has been very difficult - everything slope in several directions at once!... and then, when It is joined, getting all the sides level and square is nigh on impossible. These 2 are the only acceptable 2 after about 8 attempts, so maybe I won't build that early colliery layout :D 

 

 

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The answer is probably "not a great deal," but you are welcome to my drawings, and do some resizing, if you fancied a go at the coaches?

 

Here are a couple more shots of the railway's entire collection of rolling stock :) It is a slow process finding stuff I like and then designing the "kit" for it. I have taken some short-cuts by using the same running gear on the coaches as on some of my other stock - all built up from layered card.

 

Here is also what could be laughingly termed the track plan - drawn full size because at this size, what is the point of doing it smaller! The advantage of the prototype/period is that everything is so much smaller than even a very modest branchline train, for instance.   

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Thanks for the kind comments, and yes, it is a 3rd class one. On the list of possibilities is a closed 3rd, the body of which sits in the Head of Steam Museum in Darlington. Son and I love sitting and playing in it for hours on end... even though it is said to be haunted! If I am honest, I think the open would be more pleasant in most weathers!

 

Locos: Possibly a Neilson Box tank, or an early planet class loco. Would love to see Sans Pareil trundling round, too, if I get cocky. I am not going to get too hung up on precise time, just up to the 1860s, and mix and match as long as it looks ok. I suspect some of the smaller lines did that for real anyway!

 

Anyone know any 1850s prototypes with waggon sized wheels? Big drivers are way out of my budget at the moment!

Edited by cornamuse
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Genius idea - was also thinking of a Neilson piano tank - wagon sized wheels, too :)

 

The pair of them would look rather cute, really, and not be too far away from what I wanted.

 

Did No. 5 arrive with the cab, or was it a later addition?

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Chassis up and running... I would embed the video, but can't seem to get most of the features to behave. Will have to learn how to do this interweb mullarky

 

anyway, here is a small version of the video :)

 

The  rice pudding skin pulling capabilities of this loco look set to be minimal at best :)

 

 

chassis running tiny.wmv

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It's 16mm wooden dowel, I cut about 100mm so it was easy to handle and roughly shaped it on a bench grinder twirling it between my fingers. When it was nearly there I wrapped it in medium sandpaper and continued twirling till I was happy with it. Next I dug out the scale drawing and drew in the line of top of the boiler through the dome. I could then measure the height of the dome above the boiler top as well as the edges. Putting the domed end against a box I could measure down and mark the dimensions at 90 degree angles then join the dots with a pencil and cut it off with a piercing saw. A smear of humbrol modelling filler around the base was shaped by running something cylindrical around it, in this case a needle file handle.

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