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dibber25

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Posts posted by dibber25

  1. 2 hours ago, pH said:

    I thought that I might be wrong about the fish but when I searched for the original description of the artwork, I could not find it. I love the native art. I was last on the island in 2018 but my sister with whom I usually stayed, was in a care home by then. I stayed in a hotel in Victoria. There were serious forest fires and the air smelled of smoke. The Johnson Street bridge has gone and there are new condos going up around the roundhouse. A few bits of rolling stock were scattered around but it was the first time I had been to the island and not seen a moving train of any sort. So glad I did the Englewood when I did (twice) and that I caught the Port turn at Cameron Lake some years ago. I have a niece and nephew on the island but I'm not sure I'll be going back, either. (CJL)

    • Friendly/supportive 3
  2. 2 hours ago, rob D2 said:

    Or maybe ripple lane - Thame ? Did that go that way ?

    Yes, now I see the date again, 1983, it can't be the Staines West train as the line closed south of Colnbrook in 1981 and after that the central heating oil went via the SR. It all seems a very long time ago now. (CJL)

    • Like 1
    • Agree 1
    • Informative/Useful 1
  3. If they ever do return, passenger trains are not likely to run again on Vancouver Island in my lifetime, so I decided to produce a 'what-if' passenger train for my layout. Railway operators always like to have an image and a livery long before they have a railway or a train, so a couple of years ago the Island Corridor Foundation selected a design by native artist Darrel Thorne to decorate any new trains they might eventually have. The salmon family motif was shown on a Stadtler 'Flirt' DMU drawing. There's no suitable model so I used this Piko Desiro unit as the basis for a VIA/ICF livery. As it is a very scenic railway I decided not to have the salmon across the windows as in the original drawing but repositioned them on the lower bodysides. At the other end, Microscale VIA decals cover the American 'Sprinter' logos of a California operator. The Piko model is a lovely runner, fitted with an 8-pin decoder. I haven't yet ventured to try installing sound. (CJL)

    P1270142.JPG

    • Like 6
  4. On 18/03/2022 at 19:49, Rivercider said:

    Well spotted!

    From my notes it was 37070 on an (unidentified) tank train, presumably from the Ripple Lane area?

     

    cheers

    Can't see the picture, of course, but the Ripple Lane-Staines West central heating fuel? (CJL)

    • Like 1
  5. 16 minutes ago, DCB said:

    With so much of the retail market moving on line it makes no sense for Hornby for there to be wholesale  retail hierarchy if they can sell direct.  Trouble is they are selling to retired pot bellied collectors and that market is dying, quite literally.  Their stuff is being loaded onto eBay by their executors as we speak. 

    ....but we 'retired pot-bellied collectors' don't buy on line. We like to go into a shop and buy from a nice helpful, local shopkeeper whom we've probably known for many years. And my executors will dispose of my stuff through the same local shop because today's young folk don't have the time or inclination to post up stuff that they don't understand on Ebay, nor to deal with checking it works, packaging it up, sorting returns, complaints etc. Interesting, too, that the newcomers - Cavalier, Accurascale, Rapido etc are finding it useful - or maybe even necessary - to get their products into retail shops. (CJL)

    • Like 3
    • Agree 12
  6. I've spent an inordinate amount of time on this when I should be working on the June Steam World, but I'm finally prepared to put forward a suggestion. Wootton Rivers Halt, between Savernake and Pewsey. The following features fit:

    Approached round a curve

    Arch stone bridge with dark (brick?) parapet wall

    Concrete (frame) platform

    Hut with correct shape to roof

    RiB with inset posts

    It DID have a signal box

    Smack in David Hyde's stamping ground

    What doesn't seem to fit:

    Why would DH not recognise it?

    WRH had Tilley lamp gibbets (one per platform) but I can't see the lamp-post top in your picture.

    Photo I have is looking the other way so can't see the wrong-sided signal.

    There was a similar halt at Manningford, the other side of Pewsey but that appears to be on straighter track.

    I leave it to others to decide if I'm correct - I'm not 100% on this but can't find anything better. Irony is, I once walked from Savernake Low Level to Wootton Rivers Halt but took no photographs there. (CJL)

    • Like 7
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    • Craftsmanship/clever 1
    • Round of applause 1
  7. I, too, wondered about Finstock halt and had just been to check my own photos but I'm not convinced that it is. Finstock is in a cutting and  was reached by a footpath entrance at the far side of the hut. There is no such entrance in the picture. Also, Finstock was not fenced at the rear of the platform. There was no need as the cutting formed a barrier. Finally, although the bridge is similar, I'm not convinced that the curved arch is the same - Finstock appears to be a greater curve. Of course we have no proof that this is a halt - there could be a full-fledged station building on the other platform, which is hidden, although I think that is unlikely. (CJL)

    Finstock Halt.jpeg

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    • Agree 1
    • Interesting/Thought-provoking 1
  8. It's a puzzle because, although the signal is clearly regular GWR product, the halt does not look 'right'. The platform and fencing are not typically GWR, nor is the RiB, and the halt shelter is neither of the two regular patterns - note the curve of the roof , the back being higher than the front. I'm thinking one of the Welsh lines but no clue which one. (CJL)

  9. On 17/03/2022 at 20:08, Rich Papper said:

    I've had a slightly different but equally annoying problem. A subscriber to Model Rail for 15 years and Rail for more than 20, I received a phone call out of the blue from Bauer offering me a subscription deal on Model Rail because I already subscribed to Rail. I politely declined on the grounds that I actually already subscribed to both and the deal they were offering was not as good as the one I was already on.

    The next month neither magazine arrived. When I phoned to query I was told that it was because I had asked them to cancel it! On top of which, they then refused to reinstate the deal I had, and claimed the one they had phoned me up about was no longer available!!

    Needless to say I now read both on Readly.

    Rich

    I have notified the Editors of both titles and the matter is being investigated. I am always happy to assist with subscriptions problems if I am able. However, I prefer to do so by personal contact, rather than as the result of a public complaint on a rival publication's forum. (CJL)

     

    • Like 2
    • Friendly/supportive 2
  10. From the time I took my first trip to Squamish with 2860 I was captivated by the British Columbia Railway and couldn't wait to ride the Cariboo Dayliner. I took it twice but only as far as Lillooet, so I could get out and back in a day. The first time was when it was still the great 'dogwood' livery and the original Lillooet station. Here's the southbound at Lillooet where the cars from the morning northbound would be combined with the cars that had gone through to Prince George the previous day, for the run back to North Vancouver. Several BC Rail Budd cars survive, though at least one was destroyed by fire after hitting a rockslide and another was burned for a movie sequence. (CJL)

    PICT0009.JPG

    • Like 6
  11. Apologies for the poor quality, due to a cheap home slide scanner but this is one my first colour pictures taken in Canada, in 1976. The Lincoln Grain hopper was 'parked' in the street in downtown Victoria, BC, in what I now guess to have been Store Street, where several businesses had their own spurs off a track that ran down the centre of the street. Back home I managed to find a decal sheet and I did up an Athearn car to match. (CJL)

    PICT0010.JPG

    • Like 7
  12. 12 hours ago, mdvle said:

    Haven't seen this (just put it on hold at my library), but there is a trailer on YouTube.  A 45 minute IMAX film available (at least in North America) on disc, description from Amazon:

     

     

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rocky_Mountain_Express

     

     

     

    And for those unaware Rapido have announced they are doing 2816 in her restored version with the help of CP's steam restoration team.

     

    https://rapidotrains.com/ho-scale/steam-locomotive/cpr-hudson-2816-empress.html

     

     

    Yes, I saw Rocky Mountain Express on the IMAX screen in Victoria some years back. I was on the train when they filmed it - Vancouver (the station used by West Coast commuter trains) and I was on the footplate from Golden through to Windermere. They used a $4million IMAX camera mounted on the front of a hili-ski helicopter from Whistler.  It stopped periodically, putting down in supermarket car parks to clean bugs off the lens. (CJL)

    2816 TRIP chopper  065.jpg

    • Interesting/Thought-provoking 1
  13. Just re-watched (for the umpteenth time) Narrow Margin with Gene Hackman. It was shot on the British Columbia Railway with SD40-2 No, 757 painted in bogus VIA Rail livery with a rake of borrowed stainless steel cars also in bogus VIA markings. Squamish station is recognisable and I believe the station Lac Des Arcs was built for the movie (at Britannia Beach?). Not sure where the night-time sequence was shot. Some good scenic views of a railway that no longer has passenger trains (except for the tourist Rocky Mountaineer - which doesn't count, as far as I'm concerned)

    Also watched ( on Prime) a Hallmark romance called Love on Ice which clearly must have had a railfan on the production team. The skaters 'jog' through an underpass with 'HC' (Huron Central) boxcars above. There's a spectacular aerial view of rail yards (North Bay, Ontario according to credits) and there's a shot of Rail America 4096 and a Geneses & Wyoming HC locomotive passing. What other movies are worth a watch for Canadian rail interest? (CJL)

    • Like 1
  14. 6 hours ago, The Stationmaster said:

    Not my scale but I think that really captures the elegant simplicity of the Co-Bo body and the droopy look of the front ends.  Excellent branch line loco  too as it happens as I travelled behind one on the Lakeside branch a good many years ago.

    It ran down to Staines West a few days ago and performed very nicely. (CJL)

    • Like 2
  15. 5 hours ago, 45568 said:

    These look really good, and totally different to other LNER carriage stock. Whilst I know it didn't happen, I hope you can include BR (E) number decals for each coach! They will complement the J70 perfectly.

     Are these available for pre-order yet?

    Cheers from Oz,

    Peter C.

    I seem to recall that they did (or one of them did) carry BR numbers, but by then they were were working on the Tollesbury branch, not with J70s. (CJL)

    • Like 1
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    • Thanks 1
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  16. Chased the 'Port turn' one afternoon from the park with the waterfall (Englishman River?). I was shooting video but my wife got this still shot across Cameron Lake. From memory, there were 17 cars with half a dozen ECC cars on the rear. The tank cars carried china clay slurry and the hoppers would have carried powder. Locos were Rail America GP38-2s and a GP20 still in Railink dark blue. (CJL)

     

    Cameron Lake.jpg

    • Like 6
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