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CKPR

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  1. Reading Vol 2 of the HMRS Journal over a leisurely breakfast before the arrival of the rest of the family from Manchester, I found this charming article from 1957 by Ross Pochin. It's part of a series of pieces about the LNWR's claim to be the Premier Line and he rather cheekily but  convincingly puts forward the M&CR as THE Premier Line - you know that I'm not going to disagree with this assessment !

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  2. I'm really taken with this topic as I've always been more concerned with atmosphere than absolute accuracy and I'm more inspired by older models and layouts, especially systems built for operation. To put this into context, most of my modelling is pre-grouping, EM gauge and with a lot of very old fashioned scratchbuilding and having just turned 60, I guess I'm in the last generation of railway modellers who were inspired by Rev. Peter Denny's "Buckingham". I suppose I also remember when the standards of Pendon Museum were cutting edge and something to  aspire to rather than a mandatory blueprint !

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  3. Agricultural lime and limestone for sugar beet processing would have been  important imports into agricultural areas along with other fertilisers and seed stock, especially potatoes, with the latter two being among  the last traffic conveyed in the old 12T vans in the 1970s. Also, don't forget about oil coming in for rural factories and processing plants.

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  4. Well, I managed to finish off the LNWR and NBR wagons on the workbench and I'm going to have a go at completing No. 7 this weekend. But wait, what madness lies on t'other side of said wagons ?! In my defence, I used an unopened PC Models Sheet M13 LMS wagon insignia (methfix), so whilst I may be in the wrong, like the Hitchhikers Guide To The Galaxy, I am definitively in the wrong. The blank side of the NBR wagon is, of course, due to my lack of LNER lettering [forgetting about stash of Slaters NER 20T hopper kits with their ever so useful lettering sheets]

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  5. Currently betwixt an overnight stay in A&E at the start of the week and an out-patient angiogram at the end of the week and determined to finish painting a brace of LNWR opens. I'm also pondering going over to auto couplings, at least in part, and I'm considering Marc D's "Flippems" (I liked the look of Dinghams but these are obviously now unobtainable). Better modellers than me in the CRA have attempted to persuade me of the merits of AJs and I've got the wherewithal in the form of jigs, etc. Alas, the cluttered undersides of my wagon fleet, some of it nearly 40 years old, probably precludes fitting them. 

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  6. One thought - is the engine pulling the tender as 'dead' weight  or is the tender contributing to the effective weight & tractive effort ? There's a useful discussion of how to arrange the latter with reference to single drivers in Mike Sharman's booklet on compensation, but it essentially comes down to arranging the tender to rest on the engine via the drawbar.

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  7. On 06/10/2023 at 13:28, 34theletterbetweenB&D said:

    Whoever it may be, their cover is blown.

     

    A committee will now be convened to determine the correct editorial position on the matter of railway modelling; with particular reference to the illiberal insistence on arbitrarily derived standards which quash diversity and freedom of expression, which all proper thought rejects unequivocally.

     

    Well...there has been at least one Guardian editorial in praise of railway modelling and which defended our hobby from the yahoo cry of 'boring !', which they defined as encompassing "seemingly everything in life except football and shouting"

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  8. Use a 1:3 meths to water solution for the initial positioning and soaking of  the transfer and then soak off the remaining thin backing paper with plain water. There's no need for any decal softening or setting solutions, but when the transfer has dried and hardened off, a coat of "Kleer" will give a really nice paInted on look and protect the transfer (albeit that properly applied Methfix transfers are pretty well permanent in the first place).

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  9. On 21/06/2023 at 13:33, Morello Cherry said:

    Even a through station like Charlbury had an interesting track plan - loading bay + long gas works siding.

     

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    One advantage of Charlbury is that you can use the old  Prototype Models GWR range to provide the buildings - you'll can always find them on Ebay or possibly via Freestone Model Accessories. Also, have another look at Yelveton Junction as well as Churston as these are really compact and elegant GWR designs for junction stations.

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