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steve W

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Posts posted by steve W

  1. Sorry to butt in, but another possible option is Marcway, also in Sheffield.  They have a point lever very similar to the American ones. Good picture on their web site but no useful information like dimensions or throw details unfortunately.  http://www.marcway.net/store/1068/Point Levers  Not used them personnally, but found the page when looking for something else.

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  2. Laid up with a touch of gout, I've been sorting a vary random mixed Tesco bag of pics that range from gardens to switchboards and UK to Japan. However, Here's a few from Cornwall, Falmouth Docks, mostly an Open Day in July 1964 and a visit in 1965 to Par Docks.  The last one is probably a couple of years later.

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    #3 Hawthorn Leslie 1926.  This is a later pic as I chanced upon it simmering outside the back of the shed, probably 1972.

    That's a big brass plate on the side of the tank, the advantage of having 'in house' pattern making and casting facilities!

     

     

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    #6 Peckett 1530,  1919 with dumb buffered wagons, and enthusiasts holding on like leaches!

     

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    #6 again. Alongside a dry dock that is now part of the luxury yacht company's operation.

     

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    #4  Hawthorn Leslie, 3670, 1927. These locos were not in steam, but were 'polished' for the occasion

     

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    #5 Peckett 1530   1929

     

    These came from a trip to Par Docks

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    'Judy' on a lunch break. I spent the morning riding with the crew, one of the best mornings ever, and all for the price of 20 'Senior Service'.    Bagnall 2572 1937

     

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    Back at work; there's little/no visible ballast, the track is probably glued down with decades of sticky clay dust

     

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    This is a scan of about a third of a so-so print so lacking in detail. These locos were kept in immaculate condition with the wooden cab detail varnished and fit for a yacht. Wagon load heights /shape and sheeting vary considerably

     

    cheers

    Steve W.

     

     

     

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  3. 17 hours ago, PatB said:

    It wasn't  necessarily reworked from the form you bought it in. There are companies which specialise in "mining" PSUs from the mountains of scrap electrical goods which now exist, packaging them up as stand-alone units, and flogging them as new. 

    Yes that was likely the case, there were 'mountains' of these on sale at the time and similar ones today,  but it certainly had work done (poorly) to fit the new case by the provision of the connectors and removal of two or three components.  Whether the two loose steel strips, one down each side that rattled around, were part of the original for some sort of shielding or added for weight to imply some sort of quality I never resolved.   Sorry no pics of the guts of the failed one, but the back cover was very pretty:

     image.png.9b8b3dd5c2976d8841fdcc2dff0db5a5.png

    Of course, none of the significant marks were genuine, each had a small modification.  The unsuspecting could have been easily convinced, despite the bargain price tag at that time of under a fiver which should have raised an alarm.

    Bob is probably losing his hair by now and looking for a clockwork drive for his sander!

     

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  4. Not quite  "adopted world wide", tho as you say, Budha was enlightened.  Japan for example uses Black White green for flex colrs (L,N,E respectively), Canada (and USA) appears to use Orange, Brown and Yellow for three phase and Iv'e worked on busbars that were purple yellow and green (France at one time)  To be honest there are a whole rainbow of colour schemes

    https://wiraelectrical.com/wire-color-codes/

    After over thirty years of  working on overseas electrical installations you become a bit cautious of any piece of wire!

  5. 10 hours ago, Michael Hodgson said:

    Sounds like it's not just the plug that wants changing - if the insulation isn't adequate the whole lead wants replacing.

    In the case of our club one, your'e absolutely right - whilst investigating the lead the cover fell off the power supply (no screws or glue) revealing a reworked unit that must have failed original QC checks. Both connectors were new, the original use was meant to be hard wired as the stub ends were still attached from where they had been snipped off. Components had also been removed and nothing in their place, it did produce 12V though. I could go on, we just binned the whole thing.

    I'm not suggesting this variable one is anything like that, but the price is well below any 12V 5A psu brick (fixed output) that you would buy with a reputable UK seller and that you could claim from in the worst case. I regularly pay betwenn £15 and £30 for 60Watt brick power supplies.

  6. 22 minutes ago, Kris said:

    I would be very wary of that plug. It looks like the unfused plugs that have been supplied with other goods from China. If it is such a plug it should not be used.

     

     

     

    I would echo that. One of our groups at the club ended up with one of these leads (on a psu for LEDs). Not only wasn't it fused,  but the lead had quickly broken away from the entry to the plug revealing Red/white/black cores with very thin insulation.  A Positively dangerous thing.

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