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rogirbu

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Posts posted by rogirbu

  1. Thanks for your reply

    Plasticard would be a nightmare because access is so awkward. However  you started a new line of thought. Could I fashion a thin ferrule to fit over the mounting pegs? No- because it would be too thin to flimsy to handle. Then the answer came. Wrap something around the mounting peg. Small length of Tamiya masking tape.

    Works well and any future owner can easily remove it if they wish to refit the buffers. 

  2. Bought an Oxford Rail snow plow for my Dean Goods. Removed buffers (tight push fit)  for the plow but it is a fairly loose fit and so it falls away as soon as the loco moves.. I don't want to make a permanent fit by using regular glues as it would be nice to be able to revert to "normal". 

    Any suggestions for a secure but removable way of fitting.

  3. I am working on restoring a Lima Class 20 - the one with the central can motor as used in the Hornby model. 

    I have found that one of the gear teeth on one of the drive unit axles has been damaged, providing an audible click when running.

    I thought to replace it with a Hornby X9846 but (inevitably) there seems to be none in stock anywhere.  I asked Hornby if they could suggest a substitute . No.  I know Ultrascale have a Lima Cl 20 conversion set but £20 seems alot just to repair one axle!

    Any suggestions?

     

    Roger

     

     

  4. Found this on eBay recently, not wanting to pay Heljan prices. I am now puzzled about what make it is. The body is all white metal and appears to be from a kit. The chassis appears to be Lima, also metal. I can find almost nothing on Cl23 kits other than Silver Fox but I understand that was a resin bodyshell. The only, possible, identifying feature is that  the two rooftop vents are open - although that  might have been done by the builder

    Any suggestions would be helpful. 

     

     

    xx.jpg

  5. Wow, I didn't expect a reply that quick!

    Thanks John. I guess it must have come from a Parkside kit - I think they were the only Grampus kits.

    So- not much use to me. I'll see if anyone on eBay can make use of it, otherwise it goes into the "scrap-heap challenge" odds and ends box.

    Regards

    Roger

  6. US postal costs are a nightmare with many sellers having a minimum order quantity as well. I recommend 

    1) Identify what product you really want - make and product id.

    2) Do an internet search for stockists

    3) eMail each one and ask for their best/lowest mailing price,

    Eventually decide to accept some financial pain, unless you strike lucky!

    Cheers

    Roger

     

    PS, yes TMR Distributing is a good supplier, and being in Canada, their costs are sometimes more attractive.

     

     

    • Thanks 1
  7. Choosing rare prototypes is nothing new (and it's still going on—P2, DP2, Falcon, GT3...) and Triang had form as far as wagons are concerned—the original vent van in their range was based on an H&BR prototype. Perhaps they may have modelled this van without realising just how rare it was.

    Think I can live with rare locos - I am sure they work for collectors, but vans? BTW, I inherited the H&B van too - in Birds Eye livery? - although it is now bauxite with a BR "E prefix" to justify its continued existence.  

  8. It's supposed to be one of the six BR built Vanwides that had additional ventilators in the doors, possibly for fruit traffic.

     

    Edit: Paul Bartlett says there were six, not the three I guessed.

     

    Photos here:

     

    https://paulbartlett.zenfolio.com/brvanwide

    Thanks Giz - isn't always the one place you didn't look! I had not searched that particular set of photos, although I see he had a photo of B784288, and Hornby used B784287!

    Yes, it is a fairly crude model. 

    Strange that Hornby would choose to model such a rare original.

  9. Hornby has produced a BR 21T mineral wagon - R6161 - which has the usual diagonal white stripe but placed at the non-opening end of the wagon.

    I was under the impression that this diagonal stripe was specifically to indicate the wagon end door.

    Has Hornby just got it wrong or is there some other reason?

     

    Also, can anyone tell me the significance of the letter K at the end of the running number.

    Thanks in advance

    Roger

    post-30570-0-96710600-1538320251.jpg

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