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Booking Hall

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Posts posted by Booking Hall

  1. 10 hours ago, coline33 said:

    Good job you dated the bridge '1934' otherwise I would expect to see Burnley or Blackburn trams on it!!!   By that date the MoT had refused Blackburn permission to place its tracks in reservation and Burnley's were in their last years

    Ha! I've more than enough trouble with trams on the club layout we're building!

    • Like 2
  2. Well, building the bridge has taken considerably longer than I anticipated, but I'm happy with the result. The deck is 3mm balsa wood sandwiched between 1.3mm mounting card facings. The balustrade is 2.5mm mounting board with facings and detailing cut from cereal box card, the capping being 2mm grey board. To get the curved section I dampened the core board and clamped it to a biscuit tin overnight and applied the facings afterwards, to avoid wrinkling. The shaped beams below the deck (spandrels?) are cut from 1.3mm card. The pavement is some ancient Superquick stuff glued to card and the whole lot is painted with grey emulsion paint. It needs weathering, but I'll wait to do that with my airbrush when I finally get back home.

     

    For the photos the bridge has just been placed on the layout and the balustrade is not yet glued in place. I'll do that after fixing the main structure down.

     

    All the mounting board I use I get from a picture framer who has boxes of the stuff taking up space in his workshop. Some of the pieces (the 'waste' cut from the centre of the card he makes the frames from) are quite large, and to get rid of it he burns it in his stove! Following my first visit to 'acquire' some I returned to show him a model I'd built using it. Result - an endless free supply of good quality card!

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    • Like 10
    • Craftsmanship/clever 7
    • Round of applause 1
  3. 7 hours ago, Dzine said:

    Hi Booking Hall, I've been hoping to post a few photo's, thought they might help with the layout or just for interest sake.  Unfortunately, I've been really ill with the virus, and continue to be so, and it seems that even afterwards it takes forever to recover.  Worst of all brain and organisational skills seem to be severely affected.  Anyway have managed a bit of scanning this morning and here are the results (only low res I'm afraid).  Kind regards Paul  PS Hope they help

    Hello Paul, firstly I'm very sorry to hear you've been got by the virus, and I hope that you're soon back to good health and don't suffer any lasting effects. The additional photos are much appreciated as they show views that no-one else seems to have photographed! I particularly like the small industrial diesel shunters. There are certainly ideas there I can use, so thanks once again. The bridge is taking quite a lot longer than I expected, but another few hours should see it completed and fitted in place. I'll post some more photos then.

    • Like 2
  4. I have an unfortunate tendency to make life hard for myself. I was planning to make the bridge piers simple rectangles covered with blue engineering brick paper, but having looked at some photos of the prototype inspiration for this model, Hakin docks at Milford Haven. I saw that the actual bridge was a 1930's concrete structure, and decided to build something similar. So, it's taken me nearly all day to make four piers!

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    • Like 5
    • Craftsmanship/clever 4
  5. I decided that the next job was to ballast the exposed track, and started off with the oil tank siding, using sieved soil to start with, graduating to bonfire ash where the rail tanks would unload, then back to soil again as the rails disappear under the bridge site. To be honest, when it was don, it all looked pretty much the same, there being only a few degrees of colour difference between the two materials. It was OK, but I would have liked a bit more contrast, so I went on a scavenger hunt and came back with a potful of gravel washed off the road. I washed and dried it and then dismantled the caravan roof vent to get the flyscreen out, it being the only piece of mesh available to me. Sieving the gravel through this produced a reasonable quantity of ballast-like grains, albeit still not lightish-grey, but I used it anyway with some of the darker stuff in the loco siding.

     

    Now on to the bridge. This will be made from a sheet of 3mm balsa wood sandwiched between two layers of mounting board to stiffen it up. The piers will be made the same way. Ordinarily, I would design these in AutoCAD, then print them of and stick them to mounting board and cut them out - in the same way you make the base layers for Scalescenes kits, but I don't have a printer here so it was back to basics and carefully draw the shape out on some cereal box card to use as a template. I need four completed piers, so have to cut eight card outers. The balsa wood core will be 6mm thick for these items, painted when completed to represent concrete.

     

     

     

     

     

     

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    • Like 11
  6. 7 minutes ago, JCB 3C no.2 said:

    I don't know how hard it is to do but always thought swapping the Puffer funnel and wheelhouse position around  so wheelhouse is forward of funnel like most vessels would give a much more 'any port, anywhere '  small coaster

    Hi JCB 3C no. 2, thanks for the positive words. I haven't made a start on the wheelhouse yet, but I think I've seen some other posts on RMweb discussing the same thing. Something to do with the difference between a 'Puffer' and a VIC32, but I didn't study it in detail. I'll have a look at it when I restart on it. Building the road bridge at the moment.

  7. On 22/04/2020 at 09:21, Poor Old Bruce said:

    Wow. Never thought of magnets! Silly question next - Does that mean they need a steel backscene (can't really imagine that)?

    I used a flattened out beer can as the keeper, stuck to the backscene support. Just go into your local offie and test the cans on offer with a magnet until you find the ones made from steel. Assuming you don't get thrown out before that, buy some, bring home, pour the beer down the sink and there you are! Of course, you could drink it if you really must . . . .:smile_mini2:

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    • Like 1
    • Craftsmanship/clever 1
  8. Thanks for all your comments and reassurance about the colour. I'll leave it as is and look forward to seeing it after a few coats of varnish. All that's happened today is some colour splodged on the cliff face, the filled areas colour washed and the oil tank siding ballasted (hadn't done this when I took the photo).

     

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    • Like 4
  9. Well, here's my attempt at painting the 'water'. As usual, I think I've made it too dark, but I assumed, being a dock, that the water would be deepish. Perhaps if I drybrushed the tops of the ripples with a lighter bluey whitish colour that might lift it?  What does anyone think please? I've also added some brick and stone prints sections to the cliff face before painting, to represent repairs over time to the crumbling and unstable stone, especially below where the bridge will spring from.

     

     

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    • Like 10
  10. Next on the 'to do' list was coating the cliff face with something that would take paint better than the virgin polystyrene, and to give the water area some texture. After watching a YouTube video on how to create a sea texture I decided to go with the 'toilet roll sheets stippled into place with watered down PVA' method, and I have to say, it does look good! It did cause the cardboard I used to overlay the sea area to bow a bit, but it's returning to shape now as it dries. Tomorrow I can get some paint on both of them.

     

    This build is certainly pushing me to use new techniques, and I must say, I'm enjoying myself.

     

     

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    • Like 4
    • Agree 1
    • Craftsmanship/clever 3
  11. 59 minutes ago, Calidore said:

     

    That's a very crafty idea indeed! It looks properly convincing to me in both examples. Might have to add it to the list of methods to try out, if you wouldn't think me too brazen a thief.

    Borrow away Adam! I think I got the idea from another modeller anyway, following which I nipped into the store and ripped of a sizeable piece from their 'sample' roll. It's very cheap that way!

  12. 1 hour ago, CameronL said:

    When you get to the cameo stage this picture is just crying out for a small boy sitting at the bottom of the steps, crab fishing with a handline and bucket.

    Glad it's looking like a proper harbour Cam, and thanks for that suggestion. I could use it to hide that nasty gap between the bottom landing and the sloping string course.

  13. On 24/04/2020 at 12:02, coline33 said:

    Lovely dock layout.   Is that the Hornby PLA 74 loco?   If so, see Steve's workbench thread for repainting wagons to PLA livery.

    Hi Coline33, thank you! No, the Hattons Barclay tank is in the Burnley Corporation Gas Department livery. I live near Burnley and plan to build a gasworks layout at some point, but it does look very much at home on this one! I need to put my thinking cap on and come up with a name for the docks to tie in with the initials B.C.G.D.!!

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