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Martync

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Posts posted by Martync

  1. Having just seen Arun Quay again at the Basingstoke show today, I shall be looking forward to seeing it again. The real attraction for me though will be Leighton Buzzard, as to see a part of the Rev Denny's wonderful model railway will be an absolute treat. I dare say the Cameo's won't be bad either.........certainly better than anything I'll ever be able to come up with! ......and a very good narrow gauge layout in Crowsnest Wharf as well.

    Can't wait.........

    Martyn

  2. Can't make Wimborne unfortunately. I will certainly be at Warminster however, so will look forward to that, as I'm hoping to have seen the other cameo layouts at Railex a few weeks before.  Really going to Railex to see Leighton Buzzard as I'm a devoted fan of the late Rev Denny, and have never seen this layout before....not that I've ever been able to build anything in EM!!

    Will certainly say hello at Warminster!!

    Rgds

    Martyn

     

     

  3. Should have said in earlier post that this is a brilliant cameo. Track plan is a dead ringer for a simple layout By Ian Futers "Ashleigh" which featured in the first Railway Modeller I ever bought - September 1972!

    I'm also a fan of the Golden Valley Railway. There's still quite a lot visible if you ever go that way.

    Martyn

  4. On 19/07/2017 at 21:44, PUASHP said:

    Dave,

     

    I have my first invite already to the Wimborne Model Railway Show in March 2019. It's a lovely little 2 day show that runs biannually and usually has some great layouts so really looking forward to being there.

     

    Sorry, there is no published articles on the Stanton diorama yet but watch this space.

     

    Paul

    post-5096-0-57436100-1500497252_thumb.jpg

     

  5. The first model railway magazine I ever bought was a back number of MRC which I got from a small exhibition we visited when on holiday in the Lake District in the early 70s.  It was - I think - from 1964 if memory serves, as I don't have it anymore.  It had a very nice little layout featured in TT; "Pendean to St Day".  It really marked the start of my transition from train sets to model railways.  I must confess I was not a regular purchaser of MRC, but tended to buy it when an article took my fancy, but it was always well put together, and I think it was the first to feature colour photo's - I may be wrong on that point though...….

    I still have a few back numbers with treasured articles.

     

    Martyn

    • Like 1
  6. Hi Martyn,

     

    Next year, Bridport Town will be at Wimrail, Wimborne 16, 17 March, http://www.wimrail.org.uk/index.html

     

    Then there is the 40th Anniversary of the 7mm Narrow Gauge Association:

    Bridport will be at the AGM, taking place at the SWING Exhibition, Littlehampton on 18th May.

    Charmouth will be at the Special 40th Exhibition in Burton on Trent on 8th June.

     

    Later in the year, Charmouth has been invited to Uckfield in October, but not yet confirmed.  

     

    Cheers, Dave.

    Dave

     

    Many thanks for this.  Wimborne is certainly in range for me, and Uckfield as well if the invite goes ahead.

     

    Regards

    Martyn

  7. The only one in the pipeline so far is Railex next May.

     

    It is the last one on my list of shows that I would like to do with the layout to be ticked off.

     

    Hopefully you can make it there.

     

    After that I am giving serious thought to the future for the layout. It is high time it was attached to the rest of the layout and once that happens, appearances at shows will probably be limited to "special occasions" like major anniversaries.

    That's great.  I can "book it in" well in advance!!…...although I hope it doesn't clash with my wife's 60th!!

     

    I saw the Buckingham loco's on static display at ExpoEM, so to see the layout in the flesh is on my bucket list...….

     

    Many thanks

    Martyn

  8. Very sorry to hear about Allan Downes.  I spent many happy hours in the 70's following his guidance in making buildings.  He also had a very quirky writing style as I recall....I'll need to dust off my back copies and re-read them.

     

    RIP

  9. Hi Bill,

     

    That's very interesting, glad that I wasn't imagining the other branch of Blunts in Welwyn Garden City.

     

    It's come to my mind now that there used to be a model shop in Burnt Oak, 'Peglars'.(Early 1960s) It was in the dip going down the Watling Avenue about half way between the Tube station and the Edgware Road (Burnt Oak Broadway). I remember starting off there on TT gauge, A set that contained a Britannia 70036 Boadicea, and three mark 1's. I can remember being disappointed later on when purchasing an additional coach that the loco couldn't pull the train with four coaches, it slipped like crazy. But the loco did have a smoke unit, and you could buy smoke capsules (oil), that you dripped into the chimney. It produced reasonable smoke effects, but a rather sickly sweet aroma!

    After several years of TT I traded it in to Beatties of Southgate, and went over to N Gauge instead.

     

    Andy.

     

    Blunts in WGC (or "The Model Shop" as me and my friends always called it) was my introduction to a lot of forms of modelling - railways, plastic kits, model aeroplanes, model soldiers.  It stocked a staggering variety of products, and I spent many a happy hour browsing before parting with my pocket money.  I seem to recall it closed in the early 80's.......

     

    I moved down to Hampshire in 1993, at which time there were a variety of model shops (not all with railways) - Cove Models, Farnborough Models, Concorde Models in Aldershot...all of which are now gone.  The model shop in Farnham has just closed with the redevelopment of that end of the town.

     

    Thankfully, we still have Alton Model Centre going strong!!

    • Like 1
  10. I've looked at S scale for a long time and it seems an ideal "size". Can an average (stress - average!) modeller do anything in this scale. I see there are etches for a Y8 on the S Scale Soc website, but could that be built by the "average modeller"? I'd like to have a go, but what support is there??

  11. How could I have forgotten Under Milkwood!!

     

    I think some of Martin Brent's layouts took names out of the Mapp and Lucia books by E F Benson (Tilling??)

     

    Quite a few of M R James ghost stories have railway journeys in them - A View from a Hill, The Uncommon Prayer Book, Mr Humphreys and his Inheritance - and all are packed with excellent names and locations.

  12. I've always wondered why there aren't more layouts inspired by places in books, etc.  I've often thought this to be a rich source of inspiration.  I believe Iain Rice's North Cornwall Minerals was based on an idea from a book originally, and who knows if Frank Dyer's masterpiece was only a typo away from being a tribute to the works of Anthony Trollope!!

     

    A favourite book of mine is "Lark Rise to Candleford" by Flora Thompson, and I believe there was an exhibition layout based on this in years past.  I think it was based on MR/LMS - given the location, I would have thought GWR was most likely, followed by LNWR (off the Banbury Branch) and possibly GCR.  My favourite here would have been a "North Oxfordshire Light Railway" - or maybe Tramway.

     

    I'm currently starting a small OO shunting plank loosely linked with the North London Railway/LNWR.  This will, of course, be "Scrooge's Sidings", serving the premises of Robert Cratchit and Sons Ltd (formerly Scrooge and Marley) and I suppose should be set on Christmas Eve!!

     

    Other ideas:

     

    Fenchurch St Paul (or St Peter) - a fenland tramway (Model Rail J70!) from "The Nine Tailors" , a Lord Peter Wimsey mystery by Dorothy L Sayers

     

    Thrush Green, Fairacre or Beech Green from Miss Read's country stories - loads of potential for GWR/Light Railways, etc.

     

    Crutched Friars - a minories type city terminus, address taken from a client of Sherlock Holmes (I know it's practically next to Fenchurch Street, but this is fiction after all)

     

    There must be many more...............

    • Like 1
  13. Initially my interest was in the North London Railway, leading to a plan for a small shunting plank, which needed motive power, and lead to the purchase of a Bachman Coal Tank (as - surprise, surprise - there are no RTR NLR locos!!). 

     

    I've always had a passing interest in the LNWR however, more to do with its presence in the south of England......Oxford to Cambridge, Banbury Branch, etc

     

    Growing up in the 60's and 70's, GEM loco kits were very much to the fore, and they offered a wide range of LNWR locomotives......many of which I thought always looked very "Victorian" as their tall chimneys reminded me of mid 19th century top hats!!

    • Like 3
  14. I shall certainly be on the look out for this book as the film has a family connection.  It was the film my parents went to see on their first date, so I guess I owe it a lot!!  Whenever it appeared on the television when I was young it would always send my Mum into hysterics, especially the "duel"!!

     

    Can't wait to see it in the flesh Simon!!

    • Like 4
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