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GRASinBothell

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Posts posted by GRASinBothell

  1. I have a W&H catalogue with what looks like a print code on the back cover of 4M/4.93. So, possibly April 1993?

    The only chairs in the O gauge section are Peco ones (in brown plastic), so obviously not the ones you have. In fact, the list of Cavendish (the W&H house brand, I think) products in the O gauge section is less than a dozen, so clearly already on the way out. I think you'll have to go further back to find them.

    Gordon

  2. I really couldn't see how you could get more than one line into that eight inch width, especially if you want a platform, so I think the suggestion of plain line through scenery is a good one. You could possibly do something like Midford Viaduct, where the GW branch from Limpley Stoke ran under the viaduct (at a sharpish angle to give you more than 8" of track on the lower line). That would give you somewhere to park the second locomotive that you will undoubtedly purchase...

    Gordon

    • Like 2
  3. 2 hours ago, Compound2632 said:

     

    Intriguing red Midland wagon there...

    That is a Bing 62/510/0 MR open/mineral wagon.

    At least, that's what it looks like, based on Arne's treatise over on the Classic O Gauge Trains Forum.

    One of a grand total of 5 Bing O gauge wagons I own, so no, I'm not a brand specialist either!

    Gordon

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    • Informative/Useful 3
  4. All the No 50 wagons I checked (LOWFIT, Cattle Truck, Refrigeratot Van and Goods Van) had the same length over headstocks of 119mm (equivalent to 17ft full size, based on 7mm/ft scale). BR standard cattle wagons should be 18'6", with the refrigerator and goods vans being 17'6". So, all a little short, with the cattle wagon being the worst.

    My No 1 open wagons are about 122mm long (17'6" full scale). Cost savings making them slightly shorter for the No 50 series? My Ace coal wagon and the Progress Products chassis are about the same (as the No 1), while the Bassett-Lowke (modern, which was built by ETS and is, I think, the same as the more recent ones by WJ Vintage etc) is 115mm, corresponding to the 16'6" length (IIRC) of the 1923 RCH mineral wagon specification.

    Gordon

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  5. So, basically a scaled up Hornby-Dublo station and signal box?

    The Croydon Aerodrome suggestion is interesting. Googling found me some pictures of the terminal building (now Airport House). It was built in a neo-classical style, and the main part of the building is not entirely dissimilar to the Plasticville Union Station - perhaps a shortcut to building  Birlstone Aerodrome...

    Gordon

    • Like 1
  6. There is another thread on here (in 7mm+ modelling), called "Corps of Canadian Railway Troops – Europe 1918".

    The originator of that thread has been painting a lot of WW1 soldiers, that he refers to as "PLM figures". You might want to ask where those come from. My efforts to find them on Google have been unsuccessful.

    I'd be interested too. I have a few (very few) of the S&D ones, but as you say, there aren't many.

    Gordon

  7. On their website (https://www.arttista.com/), you will see it described as a "Man on High Wheel Bicycle" (item number 1616), with separate prices for painted or unpainted, so in principle, yes. But I have never seen them sold anywhere as anything but painted. Maybe if you contact them directly, you could get the unpainted version.

    It comes as two pieces - the bicycle (solid black) and the rider. I glued them together (and added a piece of grey-painted brass as a base, so I can put it down anywhere on the road.

    I haven't looked for a boneshaker. S&D Models (https://www.sanddmodels.co.uk/) do a number of whitemetal bicycles. I have one with a basket on the front for a delivery boy, and one with onions hanging from it, and a "Johnny Onions standing beside it.

    Gordon.

     

     

     

  8. I have to plead guilty to launching Nearholmer on the acquisition of those Harry Potter figures. They are a range called Nano Metalfigs. Over here, you can find them in Walmart (or could before lockdown - not having ventured out there, I couldn't say now!).

    One of the negatives with them is that they come on rather large bases, rather the size and shape of surfboards.

    There is an upside to that, of course, if like me you have a small beach scene on the layout.

    Sorry about the lack of focus - the camera insists on focussing on the girl in the middle distance...

    Gordon

    479320988_SmallDSCN0216.JPG.93b54d380f8d533dd447704217ab6234.JPG

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