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Mike Buckner

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Posts posted by Mike Buckner

  1. Hi Darius,

     

    I like your tips about the dragging dummy bogie and crabbing motor bogie.

     

    D'you mind my asking where you source your dummy bogie and motor bogie? I presume they're modern Hornby spares?

     

    I've a couple of projects that might benefit from this treatment.

     

    Cheers,

    Mike

    • Like 1
  2. 13 minutes ago, Talltim said:

    I'm assuming that the power cars must be standalone vehicles rather than part of an EMU, in the same way the Swiss often had single power units, sometimes with only one cab, that work with other power cars, hauled stock and driving trailers or even locos. Oh, for standard couplers and control systems...

    I think the running number is on the blue stripe at the bottom, in the middle of the vehicle.

     

    Edit: Dunno why I didn't google before, anyway https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NMBS/SNCB_M7_railcar

    It seems the power cars are Bmx!

     

    Thanks for clearing that up.

     

    They're certainly odd-looking beasts.  Judging  by  this photo, it seems single-deck/double-deck lash-ups with multiple end-units are a commonplace:

     

    https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:M7_BDx.jpg 

     

    • Like 1
  3. Thanks for the clarification.

     

    Perhaps it's a train of motley rolling stock en route to a depot for cleaning of graffiti, as most of the vehicles seem to have marks on the front or the side we can see, maybe there are more marks on the other side.

     

    The end vehicles suggest part of a double-deck EMU - of a type I haven't seen before. There are no running numbers visible on the end vehicles - perhaps they are brand new.

    • Like 1
  4. If it ends up that you cannot get satisfaction from or a replacement for the dud one, it might be worth checking if the function pins/wires are operational - for example to use in lighting a coach. You may need to put a resistor across the motor terminals to program it successfully.

    • Agree 1
  5. Brighton station has a road going East/West under the front station concourse.

     

    It also has another narrow road going North/South underneath  platforms 7 and 8. No longer used, it was built in the Victorian era, to allow horse-drawn taxis to ascend a gentle slope up to platform level, avoiding the steep incline at the top of Trafalgar Street.

     

     

    • Thanks 1
  6. I had 3 of those W.H. Smug Specials sets. All 3 had the same fault - the factory assembly of the motor had not properly attached the upper and lower steel plates surrounding the armature to the motor frame. Consequently, they were attracted by the magnet, obstructing rotation, resulting in very slow running with a hell of a clatter. Easily fixed with suitably placed Araldite. They then ran very well without much noise. They could pull far more than any other of my loco's - including a 6-axle heavy Fleischmann diesel. They easily hauled all my rolling stock at the time of about 35 coaches and wagons.

    • Informative/Useful 2
  7. On 12/03/2024 at 09:44, LBRJ said:

    There is also the point that everyone pretty much sees colours differently anyway, at least to some degree.

     

    This is certainly true. My own two eyes see things slightly differently. If I close my right eye, and view with my left, things look slightly more pink, than if I close my left eye, and view with my right, when they look slightly more blue.

     

    • Like 1
    • Agree 1
  8. 1 hour ago, stivesnick said:

    If someone starts off with a layout based on a particular place, this is then copied and modified slightly a number of times until the result is something very un-railwaylike without the builder being aware of it. 

     

    Chinese Whispers:

    Initial verbal message:  "We're going to advance - send us reinforcements"

    After several radio re-transmissions: "We're going to a dance - send us three and fourpence"

    • Like 2
    • Agree 1
  9. Technology ups the ante.

     

    When telephones came out, businesses got a phone to attract more custom. Before too long, businesses without a phone were losing custom. When the fax came, larger businesses were expected to have that. Today, in most cases a business sending handwritten communications would raise an eyebrow. In the early days of computers, dot-matrix printers were an advance over what came before - but now they would shout cheapskate. Nowadays, businesses are expected to have a website. Large businesses are expected to have a well-monitored social-media presence.

     

    I have a mobile phone, but I'm not in love with it. Sometimes it's handy. There is a growing tendency to insist on mediating transactions via a (smart)phone, which makes life less easy for those without one - but easier for the authority insisting on it. In Brighton now, you can only pay a parking meter by phone - cash is not accepted - an administrative convenience, and a reduction in theft of the cash. The railways are pushing for "smart ticketing".

     

    It will, I'm afraid, become increasingly awkward to be without one.

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