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dunwurken

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Everything posted by dunwurken

  1. To clarify when referring to myself not being aware of any reference to a loco such as this I should have added "in the articles and book on Craigshire and the C&MR by P D Hancock". You may be correct there may well have been an article by someone else. It does vaguely look familiar. Malcolm
  2. I looked at it and thought the same but I am not aware of any reference to a loco such as this. Malcolm
  3. This may appear to be a rather simplistic observation but I do think, despite longer working hours, they had more time to devote to their hobby because, in those days, they did not have the distractions caused by TV and social media. Just think how much more time you could devote to your layout if you switched off your TV, computer & phone. I agree with you 100%. The most fascinating part of my work with Craigshire was all the research and attempting to make sense of sometimes conflicting stories connected with Lord Craig and the CMR especially as PDH seemed quite capable of making it all up as he went along. What appears in Narrow Gauge Adventure does not always agree with what appeared in the RM articles despite the book largely being a cut and paste of earlier RM articles! You do of course realise the two PDs 😇😇are sitting up there looking down on us and having a good laugh at our expense. PDH was just short of 60 when the 4mm scale Craigshire was dismantled. In the following 20 or so years he moved onto the never completed 7mm Craigshire and developed an extensive garden railway. He had lost interest in the 4mm version and although sections were stored in his loft they were merely used as a source of spare parts for the 7mm layout. (I am currently repairing the 4mm Craig Castle. One distinctive feature of the castle found in use as a lighthouse on the 7mm layout. It currently lies in the castle courtyard awaiting its restoration on the gatehouse tower.) Malcolm
  4. Thank you Martin for getting back on topic. Regrettably I had nothing new to add to the topic hence I resorted to a heartfelt plea. My apologies if I came over as trying to tell people what to post. I would never tell anyone what they should or should not post - I thought I was only making a plea to get back on topic and not ruin this excellent thread with a spat about exhibition insurance. In case there is any doubt about my inspiration it was P D Hancock. Malcolm
  5. This is a topic about oldest inspirational layouts NOT exhibition insurance. Can we get back on topic, PLEASE! 🙏
  6. It was always easy to meet in Edinburgh, you always met under the clock at Binns (now the Johnnie Walker Centre) You would never meet at the top of the Waverley Steps for fear you would get blown away before your companions arrived 😆 Malcolm
  7. Rich That last photo of the goods passing the junction. I think the engine driver and signalman are in for a rollicking; the train is signalled for the branch but the has taken the main line. I thought Buckingham had interlocking but am obviously wrong or was it just tempremental electronics?
  8. Locos from both lines are held in the 009 Society Heritage Collection. Malcolm
  9. I would agree that it probably did not have a huge influence on this side of the pond. That said it left its mark on P D Hancock and the later version of the Craig and Mertonford had the backscene behind Dundreich extended up to almost the ceiling however there was no lower extension to the floor. The upward scenic extent of the layout is not always evident from the published photographs but I have seen a few photographs of it and very much regret I did not have the space to accommodate this vast work when recovering parts of the C&MR after P D's death. 😥 Malcolm
  10. If by Pendon you mean Ahern's Madder Valley Railway then, yes 😋 Malcolm
  11. You should have been standing on platform 1 at Edinburgh Waverley when an Aberdeen fish train stopped for crew change etc. before heading south. Nearly always an ex LNER Pacific but as to the make up of the train I can only recall scruffy white wagons and one hell of a stink. Always thought half the fish must be rotten before it left Edinburgh! Malcolm
  12. Hope they will spray the green parts of Shrewsbury station before heading along the Cambrian. That Voyqger looks as if it is stood on a derelict section of track the weeds are so bad. 😋
  13. Just tripped across this topic and the reference to the work of P D Hancock. The 'pin drive' you refer to was fitted to NBR 'C' Class 0-6-0 No.47 and details can be found on pages 112/3 of Narrow Gauge Adventure, 2nd Edition 1980, where it is described 'a delayed action' drive as described by K N McAldowie in the August 1948 Model Railway News. It was also described in the Railway Modeller June 1978 pages 162/3. Close up photo of the arrangement below. Delayed action mech by Malcolm MacLeod, on Flickr No.47 still exists, in working order, in the Edinburgh & Lothians MRC P D Hancock Collection. Malcolm
  14. As a retired surveyor who trained in the 1960's I endorse Alan's comments on the difference between Scottish and English bonds. The lack of lintols, properly jointed corners etc. are other items which can spoil a model for me. The fact that the loco is running forward whilst it's valve gear is set for reverse just passes me by but irritates the hell out of a friend of mine. You can never be too careful, a visiting farmer leaning on the layout barrier was aghast at my positioning of cows and sheep in a field! 😥 Malcolm
  15. Not an Essar mechanism but Reidmere of this parish is a Stewart Reidpath / Essar collector and may be able to provide more info 're the box and it's original contents. Malcolm
  16. P D Hancock was always Mr Hancock to me. I am told he was known as PD to the members of his club, the Edinburgh & Lothians MRC, but he was also known as PDH or Philip to some and Phil to others the name changing depending on the organisation, work and level of friendship! The D was for David. Malcolm
  17. Reidmere Thank you for the information on the SR/Essar chassis. I have retired from being the custodian of the ELMRC Collection but I still have access to the Collection and I will update the records accordingly. With regard to the NBR Atlantic this model is in private hands and I do not have access to it and have not seen the mechanism. Presumably it was an Essar 0-4-0 chassis as, according to the printed word it was built to order for PDH by Mr Stewart Reidpath himself supposedly just before he died. See earlier post dated 20 May 2020. I can confirm Craigshire was always 2 rail. Malcolm
  18. Well done in getting the site up and running again. One small irritation, I am still getting intrusive adverts. I use a Kindle Fire. Malcolm
  19. Oh dear. I hope the driver of that truck is not one of the Indian drivers applying for a licence to drive in the UK.
  20. To me much of the nostalgia in relation to old layouts is the noise they make. Would it be possible for the video to be reposted without the irrelevant and irritating Scottish themed music . Malcolm
  21. Prior to moving on to Scalefour, via EM, Don had been a member and past chairman of the Edinburgh & Lothians MRC. Having gone home on summer leave from Edinburgh University Don missed being a founder member of the club but joined on his return to his studies in the Autumn of 1951. After graduating he went to work for Ferranti's, the aviation electronics firm in Edinburgh, and with whom [and their successors] he remained until his retirement and his move to Shropshire. I will always remain grateful to Don not just for his support and guidance during my time on club and AMRSS committees but also for the opportunity to clamber up the ladders into his loft when he lived at Eskbank and view his exquisite layout and rolling stock first hand. Don was also generous with his time when the first 50 years of the club's history was being compiled. Much of the early club folklore was put into words by Don and so the stories about W Loch Kidston, the goat etc. are all now saved for posterity. Don also donated to the club a LMS lamp post sign for Davidsons Mains station in Edinburgh, the buildings of which were the clubs first home. http://Don Rowland [L] laying track on an ELMRC layout mid 1950s by Malcolm MacLeod, on Flickr I also learnt the hard way to consult Don on matters LMS. Back in the 1970's I was part of a small team restoring and repainting one the Scottish RPS's LMS coaches. After many weeks of struggling to paint the exterior of the coach in the inclement Scottish weather the work was complete and Don came by to see the results. Don's immediate reaction was the coach is the wrong colour and you can imagine the teams despair when it was pointed out to us we should have used a brown, rather than red undercoat. The coach is currently undergoing a further restoration. I am sure Jim Summers and partners will not make the same mistake! Malcolm
  22. I have learnt that Don Rowland has died, peacefully, at the age of 91 at his home in Shropshire. His funeral is tomorrow, Thursday 26th August at 12.00 in Chester. Malcolm [My apologies if I have duplicated a post elsewhere however I have searched the site but no other postings regarding this sad news came to light.]
  23. Why are they called the Temperance Seven when there appear to be nine members in the band? Just asking!! Malcolm
  24. As I said on this thread earlier (or possibly another thread) PD and PDH obviously had the same carpentry tutor and the same attitude to recycling parts of old layouts. Malcolm
  25. If we go back 60 years of more ago we will find a sometimes tetchy Freelance v Prototype discussion in the model railway press of the day and we are living with the outcome of that discussion namely the headlong pursuit of prototype. Thank goodness folk like PD Hancock stuck to their principles. Malcolm
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