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Ben Alder

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Posts posted by Ben Alder

  1. Here are a couple of pics I've found of the Tracklay. One shows three lengths of track - straightened, with the Tracklay applied, and ballasted. The other shows the ballast shaken over the track and then tamped in place. Excess - Greenscene - is saved and used again.

    PP100_4160-crop.jpg.4bfbd04198318a6059705a9c0da7f27f.jpg

    PP100_4159-crop.jpg.6ba8eaf342d5cea646cfce7c7ffd2504.jpg

    On the layout I used Peco foam ballast point inlays covered with Copydex, ballast applied and left to dry. They are all still in perfect condition after twelve years, but as these are now discontinued I now cut a piece of the closed cell foam I covered the baseboards with to shape, cover with Copydex, ballast and let set under a weight. Pic of a recent alteration to illustrate.

    PPIMG_0320.JPG.eacb62572a60fb10f22f2b5737894e84.JPGPPIMG_0328.JPG.89046d4325664e7f6179cffbbcf41fe8.JPGPPIMG_0330.JPG.fc0887dd333ed7a9939305e4af6d58dc.JPG

    The baseboard has some of the foam cut away to fit the point in - the plain track sits on top of the foam and is lightly pinned until I am sure that all is running well then infills of cork are laid and a bead of Copydex is run along the sides of the ballasted track and a sprinkling of ballast applied. Once dry the pins are removed which leaves the track held in place laterally but with a degree of vertical movement that gives very good, almost silent running. It works best visually with thin sleepered track but I have in the past used it with Peco Code 75 track happily enough, but that was before the digital camera applied its relentless lens to ones work, showing every shortcoming cruelly...but as can be seen with the bullhead point above, a thick coating of Copydex and a press down of the applied ballast results in an acceptable result. All in all, it takes all the pain and effort out of one of the least enjoyable parts of the hobby.

     

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  2. 16 hours ago, ITG said:

    Thanks, I’ve ordered a trial pack but would be interested to see a photo or two, please. How does the process you describe work for turnouts? I assume it’s easy enough to cut and shape the foam, but does the same approach to ballasting still apply?

    ian

     

    I'll dig out some photos that still exist - most were lost when the IT disaster happened and I had dumped  a lot from my files but there are some about- just got to track them down. The points aren't any problem though. Back in a day or two.....

  3. Big shout out for Tracklay - a roll of foam with an adhesive side that the track is laid on and pressed in place and ballast scattered on top, tamped down ,surplus shaken off, and a metre of track ballasted in less than a minute...it can then be curved to shape as required. I lay mine on top of a 5mm foam base which gives a silent, easily adjustable road bed. I have a blog on it but the images are gone. If you want I can post some here.

     

    https://www.tracklay.co.uk/product/oo-gauge-underlay-5m

    • Interesting/Thought-provoking 1
  4. HR goods sheds, as Mark says, were the same but different, especially when it came to offices. There were internal ones, external ones and it seems some with none... It is difficult to ascertain from photos the extent of alterations over the years , particularly from the board and batten exterior where any changes  can soon blend in to the existing structure. Wick was a case in point, with a demolished attached office that when newly done showed up as a ghost on the replaced wall cladding, and a few years later had blended in with the remainder of the structure. Every external office seems to have been different, which is strange considering the apparent uniformity of the basic  shed structure, and Thurso had an extensive attachment that vanished in the early sixties, its presence  indicated by the footage. It was one of the many aspects of railway operation that appeared to have been unrecorded in image - there are glimpses in several photos, but two pictures have emerged that show the building. Here is a crop from one of them. As an aside, the doors were latterly a chocolate brown as opposed to the overall creosote, but by the eighties they had faded to be indistinguishable from the equally faded walls.

     

    Thurso officecrop.jpg

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  5. I've been asked by a non digital modeller about the availability  of S&C structural drawings. Done a bit of Googling and  index digging but nothing substantial is showing up. Can anyone point me to printed options please. He is a competent modeller and doesn't want to do the Metcalfe option. Alternatively, are they accurate enough to extrapolate details from.

    • Like 2
  6. I have used Orbit controllers - DC dinosaur that I am - for the last thirty years with success and recently reinstated my H&M 3000's and Walkabouts, which to my mind have never been surpassed for smooth operation. Both makes do quibble at the few coreless motors I have so a Morley is added for these; another good buy but really could do with a more positive centre off. Having said this, it is the two or three Heljan locos that need the Morley - a hacked about O2 responds well to both older makes with no problems, more so once I disconnected one of the geared axles and let the connecting rods do their work. As for all the modern internal circuitry in many offerings, it is all stripped out and the pick ups hard wired to the motor. Still have a 1970 Duette parked as a bench unit and everything is tested on it before layout trials, but  although it makes them go it doesn't have the subtlety of the  later technology.

  7. Latest from Pop Up - two more for the Dornoch portfolio - a gable ended goods shed of a type used in various places on the HR and a John Menzies kiosk that graced the platform there. These two kits mean that all the railway main structures needed to model Dornoch are now available with only one or two small huts needing to be scratchbuilt. The kiosk also has applications all over as these were sited at many stations for decades.

     

    good-shed-2.jpg.ac29b6b380d95ee8ed71be0fea3bfade.jpgkiosk-oo-1.jpg.b06dd7d48475297ca96f81e14d5c5251.jpg

    • Like 8
  8. Rocket will be fine - Redutex wil probably be a bit coarse for n; a paper covering will be better.I build the model and then spray with a grey acrylic and then finish with building papers or acrylic paint depending on the prototype exterior. You will manage Rannoch by painting I imagine as the embossed brick finish is fine once painted. Plenty on line images of Rannoch over the years if you do a search, but Ernies Archives has a West Highland album of mainly colour pictures that is a treasure  trove for the modeller as it concentrates mainly on infrastructure rather than trains.Any modellers range of acrylics will suit these kits. HTH.

     

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