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Caley Jim

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Posts posted by Caley Jim

  1. I've built 11 locos so far without any machine tools, other than an old Black and Decker drill and a minidrill. These include total scratch-builds, white metal and etched kits and from my own etches. As @VRBroadgauge as said, it's a matter of having a go and learning from your mistakes. 

     

    Jim 

    • Like 3
  2. Commiserations to you both from me too, Jerry.  Pets become part of the family and it's never easy losing one, whether it's your own or is part of one of your family's family.  Still miss the Beagles my daughter had, though the last one passed away several years ago.

     

    Jim

    • Thanks 1
  3. My friends (wooden) cabin now has metal sheeting about 3ft up the walls and also round the uprights supporting the roof over the veranda after the cockies attacked them (the walls and uprights, not the people!) one year.  At a neighbouring cabin they actually got through the walls and made a mess of the interior!

     

    Jim

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  4. 52 minutes ago, monkeysarefun said:

    Instead of politely  waiting their chance and thus ensuring everyone got a go, they would fight and pull each other off the tap thus making it impossible for any to get  a drink. I think watching that  example of everyone-for-themselves played out in a thousand playgrounds  has made Australians  the work-together society that we have become.

    Was there not a Kookie around to do the 'benevolent policeman' bit and keep them all in order as we used to see at my friend's cabin in Halls Gap?

     

    Jim

    • Like 1
  5. 1 minute ago, yaxxbarl said:

    Unfortunately I'm not going to get down to Uckfield now as I would have liked to see some of the old Rice classics - hopefully some of them may venture to The North in time.

    Derbyshire?  The North?  That's almost the Deep South from where I'm sitting!

     

    Jim

    • Round of applause 1
    • Funny 4
  6. 11 hours ago, Compound2632 said:

    No sound, I hope!

    And why not, might I ask?

     

    11 hours ago, Compound2632 said:

    if you get rid of the spurious bogie guard irons.

    CR 0-4-4T's always had the guard irons on the bogies, same with 4-4-0's.  Surely that kept them directly over the rails?

     

    10 hours ago, Skinnylinny said:

    "You've got three bullets. What do you shoot?"
    "The bagpipes. Three times..."

    Moderators, can we please, please have a 'thumbs down' rating?

     

    What you want is a full pipes and drums, WITH SOUND!  I could stand in front of that layout all day!  😁👍

     

    Jim

    • Like 5
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  7. 7 hours ago, Compound2632 said:

     

    Here:

    http://www.barrowmoremrg.co.uk/BRBDocuments/Booklet_BR20426_Issue.pdf.

    I had misremembered; these instructions say for five trucks, use the bolsters on the first and fourth trucks for round timber but the second and forth trucks for such things as rails and girders. In these cases, the bolsters are kept on the other trucks, to spread the weight, but the load is not secured to them.

     

    The LNWR instructions are the same except they do not include the examples with bogie timber / bolster trucks.

    Somewhere I have a copy of similar drawings for the Caledonian Railway, who referred to these as 'swivel wagons'.  Their 'General Instructions relating to Goods Mineral and Live Stock Traffic' state in Rule 97:

    Long timber and iron, requiring more than two wagons, must be loaded so as not to bind the whole of the wagons too tightly together. Swivel or Bolster trucks must be used when possible.  Guard trucks, or under-runners, may be used when necessary, to ensure safe transit.

    and within Rule 98:

    ....Rails, Bars, Plates &c., on Bolster or Swivel truck, must have the chains wrapped round, and not merely tightened over them, and the trucks must be coupled together as tightly as possible to prevent the loads shifting in transit.

    There is also an instruction for guards to examine such loads at every stop.

     

    Jim

    • Like 3
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  8. 7 hours ago, Tom Burnham said:

    I don't follow affairs north of the border in much detail, but I wonder whether the apparent softening of support for the SNP is due to voters looking beyond the Big Idea and assessing their actual outcome related performance in government?

    I never have and never will support independence, but if the SNP can't manage their own finance, what chance would an independent Scotland have in their hands?  We'd be back to the reason for the union in the first place!

     

    Jim

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  9. 5 hours ago, Andy_C said:

    I empathise with the mojo issue. I get round it by just tackling what I fancy tackling, and when. 

    I've done little on my Kirkallanmuir layout itself over the past two years, other than playing trains a bit of maintenance work, however I have added two locos to the fleet along with a set of three 65ft carriages (see link in signature).  I've also been doing some work for our area group layout http://2mmfcag.blogspot.com/ so have not been idle, but doing rather as @Andy_C has said.  Currently almost finished drawing up the artwork for an appropriate loco for the Glasgow and Edinburgh Direct set.

     

    Jim

    • Like 6
  10. 16 hours ago, Edwardian said:

    In the meantime, when bin raiding goes horribly wrong ...

     

    IMG-20231008-WA0000.jpg.9b7add5deb1faef15ff5abea6467d894.jpg 

    Is that a beagle perchance? If so, you have my sympathies! 

     

    Good to have you back here, James. Having been through a period of Ill health earlier in the year (major bowel op) I can confirm that modelling is the answer! Now what was the question? 

     

    Jim 

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  11. 7 hours ago, kevinlms said:

    The figure for the worst offender (the Caledonian!) was

    1905  65,615 wagons & 2,199 miles at an average of 29.8

    1923 51,536 wagons & 2,830 1/4 miles at an average of 18.2

    This reflects the fact that a large part of the CR's traffic was in coal from mainly (but not only) the Lanarkshire coalfield.  Of that 65,615 1905 total, no less than 42,885 (65.3%) were mineral wagons, including many early 'bogies' of 6 or 7 ton nominal capacity.  These latter were replaced by larger wagons and the company tried to introduce high capacity wagons, vis. the 30T bogie wagons, but were thwarted by the intransigence of customer industries to upgrade their handling facilities to accommodate these.  They also had proposals in 1901 for 15T and 20T long wheelbase steel mineral wagons, but these were likely to have encountered problems on sharply curved colliery lines and it assumed this was the reason for not proceeding with them.

     

    Jim

    • Informative/Useful 1
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