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Nearholmer

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Posts posted by Nearholmer

  1. I think that “English” as an identity has acquired a serious amount of toxicity, which means it’s very difficult for many of us to identify with it, which becomes very apparent in the lead-up to St George’s Day every year, and more so with each passing year. I’m afraid that to quite a large extent Englishness as an identity has been captured by petty nationalists, bonkers-past-golden-agers, xenophobes, and racists. 
     

    If somebody holding a flag can tell me that said flag symbolises a genuine effort to live by a set of values that I can espouse, then I can “get behind it”, but right now we seem to have a choice between Britishness, which has been so sullied by the current government that it needs to be put through the washing machine several times, and Englishness, stained filthy with gammon-dripping. Britishness is, I think recoverable; Englishness, I’m less sure about.

     

     

     

     

     

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  2. Some very good things could come out of it, especially in terms of presenting a cogent set of “products” (fares, timetabling information, integration with other modes etc) to potential users, but as others have said the challenge will be funding for asset renewals and upgrades. 
     

    My impression, not informed by a great deal of recent analysis I admit, is that the assets (fixed and mobile) that form the railway are not in too bad a shape overall (which isn’t to say that there aren’t parts that are at the point where big money needs to be spent now), but that any funding-starvation could quickly tip things over into “runaway”.
     

    Alongside that, there are all sorts of other nationally important assets, hospitals, schools, public housing, electricity supply, water and sewerage systems, some aspects of roads even, that are already into “runaway”, some in public custodianship, some in private custodianship (but just watch the private sector drop hot potatoes when it wants), and a military that needs investment too, so there is going to be a huge by fight for money, and historically when that happened under public ownership, railways were always at the back of the queue.

     

    In terms of labour relations, the legacy looks like a poisoned chalice to me, with an El-Bonkers variety of Ts & Cs  and working practices in being, some crucial shortages of highly-skilled staff, and every incentive for current government and TOCs to leave things in the biggest mess imaginable, making only play-acting attempts to resolve current disputes.

     

     

     

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  3. On 21/04/2024 at 23:37, 65179 said:

    Hammond air pre-heater apparently


    It’s a heat-exchanger, using heat from the exhaust gasses to pre-heat combustion air that is fed into the firebox. It required a whole new smoke box, plus ducting to the firebox, and was claimed to save up to 20% on fuel, which it didn’t. The trial was in 1907-08, but I think the gubbins was left in-situ, at least in part, but disconnected, until the loco was scrapped in 1912.

     

    (All from Bradley)

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  4. Yep, clockwork flings oil about in all directions, and brass tarnishes to brownish-black simply by contact with air.

     

    This has been outside enjoying the vagaries of the weather for upwards of fifteen years, so has a nice patina now.

     

    IMG_0408.jpeg.368225ded7b44f974fdbe29eb7c2e1e4.jpeg
     

    Different brasses give slightly different colours of brownish-black.

     

    Nickel silver also tarnishes, and in some conditions it will do so in a much more troublesome way than brass, but indoors in low humidity it behaves itself.

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  5. That’s a nice circuit, but definitely best done in the week when it’s quieter. Last time I did it, I actually got stuck behind two people going slowly on e-bikes along that easy section beside the road, which was a bit frustrating.

     

    Your seat angle looks murderous; is there really no way of adjusting it flat?

  6. Do some historians portray Cromwell as nothing but a tyrant? If they do, that’s a portrayal very much lacking in nuance, as is the one-liner portrayal of him as the bloke who cancelled Christmas, and their books probably aren’t worth reading. Some of the things that he put in train, notably in Ireland, were tyrannical, but some have acted as very effective protections against the possibility of tyranny, and in some respects he was, oddly enough, very much a liberal by the different standards of his times.

     

    As to whether the naming of the loco was controversial at the time, you’d have to look at newspapers (which often deliberately foment controversy to increase sales of course, so aren’t always a trustworthy guide!), but I doubt that it was significantly so, give the care taken over these things, and the fact that the basic naming scheme for the class was suggested by a prominent churchman, and reflected what might be called an “establishment view” of the world, flavoured with some regional inclusiveness, Cromwell being very much an East Anglian.

     

     

     

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  7. I was up there last summer, and the railway does seem pretty spruce and well run, but every time I thought about the amount of infrastructure involved, the cost of that, and the number of passengers, I kept getting a sinking feeling.

     

    One can only hope that as the inevitable increases in the cost of motoring continue, there will be a slow swing back towards more people using the trains, and fewer using cars, but that in itself poses big questions about the economy of the area, and how dependant that is upon car-borne tourism.

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  8. IMG_0297.jpeg.73c3af5892c7ae54914b4bd1a17189d7.jpeg

     

    Self explanatory, really.

     

    The venue is very interesting if you ignore all the too modern things in it. Look out for the Starley Rover, the first production safety bicycle, which is near the entrance, and marvel at the leg-strength of Victorians.

     

     

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  9. 9mm ply is about 3.5 to 4.5kg sq metre, depending on quality, so call it 4, and double the actual area to allow for the underlying frame of ply, roughly 6kg.

     

    Which doesn’t sound a lot, but actually becomes quite a devil to handle alone to the size/shape.

     

    I’ve got an 0 gauge layout that has to be dismantled and packed away when the spare room is needed, on White Rose 9mm ply base-boards, two of which are 1000x750 and fold together as a pair. Together, they are really awkward to handle by myself - I can’t lift them direct onto the trestles due to the combination of weight and bulk, so have a routine that raises them in stages (too complex to explain, but it works!).

     

    So ……. I’d think seriously about whether you might be edging towards what is practical to handle alone. Probably OK if there is plenty of space for manoeuvre, but possibly not if space is tight.

     

    The White Rose 9mm boards are truly beautiful quality, and built like the proverbial. For a small 00 BLT I’m doing, which is meant to be super-portable, I’ve used the G&H 6mm boards, and by comparison they are light as feathers. The G&H ply is not only thinner, but much less dense, so not quite as robust, but robust enough for practical purposes. Prior to these two layouts, I’ve always built my own boards, many down the years, some successes in terms of weight/size/portability, some abject failures! The failures have always been on grounds of size/bulk, not sheer weight, incidentally. A 10kg bag of spuds isn’t heavy, but a 10kg model railway layout board would be a serious problem.

     

     

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  10. Mud and wind are certainly major factors currently.

     

    Fortunately, we’ve got a right old mix of soil-types within easy range round here (thanks to where the ice sheets ended in that last ice-age apparently), so since the actual floods subsided a few weeks back, I’ve been able to choose free-draining ground, the chalk woods on the Chilterns, and the Greensand Ridge. I did go on a couple of trundles on the more clayey bits, but came back with about 2kg of mud stuck to the bike each time, so I’m not going that way again until it dries out more!

     

    IMG_0196.jpeg.2fd629eb577de037d0c2ece288c8384c.jpeg

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  11. I’ve long thought that much of reality is rather overrated, and that even “the best” model railways require so much self-delusion to make them seem realistic when seen in the flesh, that I sort of don’t prize “realism” all that highly. Sometimes, I think that evocation does the job just as well, if not better.

     

    IMG_6333.jpeg.8a6452115eefc5b97431ebb612dc00cb.jpeg

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  12. Brilliant magazine, which covers both very interesting prototypes, and some very stylish modelling. 
     

    When I was into NG, I subscribed, and had every edition up to maybe some date in about 2018.

     

    The other magazine to consider is Narrow Gauge & Shortlines Gazette, the much older US equivalent of this and NG&IRM, which I suspect inspired both to some degree.

     

    i hope that selling it proves to be a good decision commercially, because it does deserve to be better known.

     

    Next challenge must be to find and import an equivalent Japanese publication, because quirky NG modelling is a very popular thing there, but only gets very occasional exposure here. All three mags mentioned above have carried articles by Japanese modellers over the years, but there is a sort of untapped (by people who don’t speak Japanese) well of craft and aesthetic there. Victors imported a couple of Japanese books of photos of NG layouts way back in the late-1970s, but I’ve seen nothing since.

     

     

     

     

     

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