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Northroader

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    Cheltenham Spa
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    Well, after many happy years working in a spacious loft, the consequences of old age has forced me to downsize to a small bungalow. I want to continue in 7mm scale, and look at modelling 1900s Britain and Europe, 1950s America, and exercises in whimsy.
    Many thanks for the interest and support for my threads, looking through I realise that RMweb is fortunate in having the thoroughly decent people that use it.

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  1. ALPHABETISCHES VERZEICHNISS DER EIGENTHUMS-MERKMALE 1896 Andy, thanks for the link to that French book, which looks highly tasty. At present I’m trying to keep expenditure down, (although I have gone mad and bought a pair of points), because we haven’t yet succeeded in selling the house we moved out of last September, but if and when we do, that book does look irresistible. Having said that, I’m wondering about the OUEST wagon in bauxite brown. I fancy it might be for Regime Accelere, when a lot of bauxite wagons appeared. Originally I thought they were done umber brown, like the LSWR/ SR shade, because that’s how the Reseau Breton did theirs, the RB being the OUEST wearing a metre gauge hat. But then there’s this book I borrowed out of Dresden reference library, which categorically states “OUEST: grau fur guterwagen”. Most interesting reference for the European scene in 1896: https://digital.slub-dresden.de/werkansicht/dlf/113339/1 Now, modelling the open wagon, get a set of wheels with flower petal spokes from Slaters, and two drawings, one of which has appeared before on this thread, funnily enough, and the other is of a breakdown wagon using the same chassis, lifted out of Lammings article linked above. Time is the only thing holding me back, Don.
  2. Here’s a “square on” picture of one of those 2-4-0s. The main difference with a Crewe Goods is the “long boiler” configuration. and here’s a OUEST wagon which has seen better days! (Wonder what colour they were painted?)
  3. The storage of mines explosives was usually done in a small isolated building, quite secure, brick built and with an iron door. Your idea of a second building for storage of high grade mineral ores (in sacks), seems very likely.
  4. IMHO the Iain Rice track plans can be improved by reducing the number of sidings.
  5. REMEMBER THE OUEST. I came across this picture the other day, an old OEUST Buddicom 2-4-0, very much a French version of a LNWR “Crewe Goods”. It looks as if it’s waiting the scrap man, so probably 1900s, but a lovely prototype. I was pushing the OUEST system back on pages 18 - 19 of this thread, also a link to Clive Lammings pages back on page 4, so here’s an essay of his on this theme (including wagon drawings): https://trainconsultant.com/2023/10/30/la-compagnie-de-louest-et-son-histoire-ephemere/ and while I’m at it another one of his on “Bicyclettes”, “Boers”, and the OUEST suburban lines: https://trainconsultant.com/2022/01/10/il-etait-une-fois-dans-louest-la-bicyclette-mais-pas-le-velo/ There are still two OUEST tank engines waiting for their superstructures in the railway room, also for a layout to run on. Last year was a writeoff for such progress, maybe this year.
  6. Now, self effacing modesty is all very well, but I think all the congregation of RMweb who ve met either of you would say different, so keep flying the flag! Mind, venturing that far down Corporation Road in Maindy……
  7. Thanks for the photos, I enjoyed seeing Lockdown Fen in action, as well as the other jobs you highlight. This was a show well worth attending.
  8. Up and Down was peculiar in South Wales, the Valley lines like the Taff Vale regarded them in accordance with the prevailing gradient, down through the valley towards the sea, but the lines absorbed into the GWR earlier on, such as the Llynfi and Ogmore, or the Monmouthshire, had the GWR thinking of down from London applied. The result was that up and down were opposite directions in adjacent valleys, and this stayed on into BR days. Then on the North to West line, the directions switched, a Plymouth to Manchester express was a down train as far as Hereford Barrs Court, then became an up train on to Shrewsbury.
  9. Mon ami, Routier du Nord, il dit: “Les Signaux?? Pouff!!, tres simples…”
  10. Sorry to hear you’re having a bad patch (also miss T) hope things are picking up. As to signal box kits, I came across one maker on RMweb, and jotted it down for reference. No knowledge or experience of them, so anyway: https://railmodel.co.uk/collections/frontpage
  11. Now just a listed building, formerly the “Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Hospital” (as a kid I used to think it was “Ioneer”) used to do all that sort of stuff for what it is now Hipposhire and Telfland. I got my glasses from there, plus they extracted my tonsils and adenoids, which used to be a fashionable medical stunt. Sic transit and all that…
  12. There’s a little bit stirring on the scenic side of things, as I’ve been chopping up layers of 10mm foamboard to form a support for the ground shell. They’ve gone down rather like contours on a map, and it has been useful to show me what sort of shape and height the “hills” can be, without overly dramatic gradients. Rather less than I envisaged, of course, but I can still gain a bit more contrasting height with some trees and foliage.
  13. I know, when was the last time we had a pre- Raphaelite?
  14. RED/GREEN - COLOUR BLINDNESS. A snowy night in 1875, and I’m sorry to say two of the B.P. Singles were involved in a tragedy with the premier trains in Sweden. I thought I’d post this as a look into operating circumstances back then, and it’s not from a link you’d expect on RMweb, but most interesting. My first move when joining BR was a trip to the Crewe works, which was the nearest to where I lived, for a medical, including a colour blindness test, and the need for this ties into what happened back then. https://vision.psychol.cam.ac.uk/jdmollon/papers/MollonCavoniusOnLagerlundaCollision.pdf
  15. The clocks went on and I go to bed early, and only just caught up (excuses, excuses) but happy birthday belated wishes.
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