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Cambrian Shed (nearly Aberystwyth shed). Now with Cambrian Mainline diorama


SteamingWales
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10 minutes ago, B15nac said:

I'm after some GWR lamps like this not sure how to go about it maybe scratch built is the way forward

 

Regards Neil 

 

Try DCC Concepts for GWR Lamps, although they are a bit pricey

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It's something that I noticed that we seem to have gone backwards on during my twenty odd years absence from railway modelling. You used to be able to buy metal kits for all manner of GWR gas and oil lamps, as well as the Tilley lamps and various other pre grouping companies. The same thing applied to such items as water columns and other company specific paraphernalia. I suppose that it's a result partly of people retiring, or selling out to the competition, but mostly the trend moving away from making a model towards opening boxes.

Happily the exceptions seem to have gathered here.

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2 hours ago, B15nac said:

Lots of depots on the western region had this type on posts 

 

Screenshot_20230115-181630~2.png


Of course that might be post Nationalisation. I don’t think they would be typical of depots in the GWR era….

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I've not done much in terms of physical modelling today, only painting the windows for the boiler house.

 

I have however been messing about with CAD again to draw up the entrance to the western/coastal end of the workshop. It still needs a bit of cleaning up but I felt it worth sharing 

 

PXL_20230115_211308233.jpg.46db3f1ad6917791c172e6891de1b86a.jpg

 

On the subject of wall lamps and yard lamps (see below photo, best I could find) some of the yard lamps have the added addition of supporting telegraph wires (or maybe the other way around🤔) so a bit of modelling will have to be done at some point

 

Manor 7818 Granville Manor

 

 

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Given the vast number of green enamel lampshades that have graced this land over the last hundred years, I'm surprised that nobody has ever sold sprues full of them in the way you can get drainpipes, roof ridges, chimney pots etc.

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20 hours ago, B15nac said:

Lots of depots on the western region had this type on posts 

 

Screenshot_20230115-181630~2.png

Totally useless things - I always reckoned the main idea of those lamps was to create enough light to enable to avoid walking into the pole they were mounted on.  Often far better to work without such things than with them although some did give a much better spread of light..

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My pet hate was always those 110v tungsten or halogen work lamps. Not only were they blinding, but they created massive shadows and in a confined space used to mess with your depth perception. They also used to get red hot, which was useful in the middle of the night or mid winter, but if you were working in a confined space there was always a good chance of burning yourself on the damned things.

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3 hours ago, The Stationmaster said:

Totally useless things - I always reckoned the main idea of those lamps was to create enough light to enable to avoid walking into the pole they were mounted on.  Often far better to work without such things than with them although some did give a much better spread of light..

 

I seem to remember some were still in place along Napier Road in Reading until the area was used as a compound for NR during the station rebuilding/electrification.

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I've been getting the hang of the ModelU guttering today and fitted the main guttering and outlets to both the workshop and boiler house. Down spouts to follow once I source the relevant plastic strip to do these

 

PXL_20230121_221247329.jpg.bd0e66ef04de072eadd19b052cdef6c3.jpg

 

I've also cleaned up and given the seaward/western entrance to the workshop it's first coat of paint

 

PXL_20230121_221152719.jpg.19a8978b56cc51308f70a9cba9e83c83.jpg

 

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  • 2 weeks later...

Slowly but surely the shed build plods along with progress over the weekend and last few nights.

 

The first little job has been to paint all the steel work with separates/supports each brick section. Black internally and red brown externally, both will need weathering to tone them down but the appearance is much better already Vs the milky brick red previously present

 

PXL_20230131_215232357.jpg.866ddb4eaf45d1ad6a283e37939104f1.jpg

 

The internal shed walls of the boiler house have had the mucky wash treatment as well as the window panel being attached at the eastern end where the shed entrance isPXL_20230131_214957712.jpg.0b0489f439a9703d1dd2e87610821deb.jpg

 

PXL_20230131_215139464.jpg.afd78be649a58a29b87b0d66a75af5c9.jpg

 

One thing I have put off for ages as well is the brickwork that sits in between the steel work and front of the shed. This is now being addressed so everything should fit together nicely when the time comes PXL_20230131_214920483.jpg.d78d0f23efcf32f6b561c6eb4a1eac5a.jpg

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Some general layout news but very important all the same.

 

It's my birthday in a couple of days so I treated myself to a Ten Commandments rolling road, which as I'm sure everyone knows is very useful when having an end to end layout. It's been put through its paces by my K1 (which is the only loco I have at my parents where the road was delivered)

 

PXL_20230203_192005563.jpg.51ce9018bc9b2b8bd0adfce8a8e5551b.jpg

 

I haven't gone mad buying NE locomotives. I bought the K1 with my birthday money from my 18th, before seeing the light of the GWR, so is a very personal locomotive to me and hasn't been run in about 4 years having sat in storage. I will probably be renumbered it to 62005 in the future as a reminder of a trip on "The Jacobite" which 62005 hauled.

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End of play with layout building (for now). I ran out of materials due to a slight design change and also ran out of time as I had to be back in Yorkshire. But this is where I'm at....

 

PXL_20230205_204612263.jpg.e97d1c98613b15c5f5fb3f8ddfc19afa.jpg

 

One side near complete and the other we won't talk about. After a big sort out I couldn't resist getting some track and locos out 😁

 

PXL_20230205_213913745.jpg.3b14b42491af20db61ff56038002f789.jpg

 

PXL_20230205_215156318.jpg.4305bc24177c4e4077510e1eaac87b1b.jpg

 

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After moving the baseboard to their final home in the spare room I set too today properly marking out where all the track and building will finally sit. The main purpose is to work out placement of the pits to cut out the holes in the baseboards

 

PXL_20230212_170521665.jpg.9d8f9dc9664e677a889d70b206c20f6d.jpg

 

Progress so far

 

PXL_20230212_170449736.jpg.5dba7eaa2dea222e51c026a72186ad7d.jpg

 

Checking locomotive clearance with the boiler house

 

 

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i think we are at similar stages, ive just marked out most of my trackwork positions so i can add the turntable and point motors etc before i finally brace the boards, if i braced them first i would find everywhere i need to go through would foul something or other!!

I ought to go and put up some progress pics on my Welshpool thread.

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I've been doing a little more work with trackwork planning.

 

I have a bit of a conundrum with the coal stage ramp.

 

A bit of reading around on here and elsewhere has coal stage ramps at about 1:35. The current gradient below sits at around 1:16 so roughly twice as steep. 

 

So do I fit the whole ramp within the scenic baseboard space or extend the ramp into the fiddle yard space???

 

PXL_20230213_205017558.jpg.36d88e512e472be9b326fdfeac6638e0.jpg

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I was catching up on the Hornby TV show at my modelling desk this evening whilst having a mess around with the 74xx and some coal wagons. The conclusion is that it CAN make it up the 1:16 ish with 3 unloaded MDOs but with a load it is a bit of a struggle without giving it some welly and shot down on the descent.

 

Testing on a 1:35 ish it had little problem with the load and no major speed difference going down.

 

I also set up both gradients a bit more accurately with some spare timber strips to get a better visual idea and posed the scene with a 4MT for good measure

 

1:16 👇👇

 

PXL_20230214_210255503.jpg.027f35777b42f436de64d77e4037012b.jpg

 

1:35👇👇

PXL_20230214_210326257.jpg.cc7432da334f62713e3988c6f66fcd84.jpg

 

My conclusion is the 1:16 just feels a bit too toy like in terms of gradient and speed required. Plus aesthetically the 1:35 look better and more in keeping with the overall realistic aim of the layout 

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