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Finsbury

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Posts posted by Finsbury

  1. I’ve seen p4 layouts that ran poorly and couldn’t seem to keep stock on the rails at times and OO that ran beautifully , I don’t think the gauge has much to do with it , actually

    Dave

    That wins the internet for the most obvious statement. Have an 'informative'.

  2. The sound of a Deltic is so evocative of my youth. I remember my first encounter, '78 or '79. 'Hit me with your rhythm stick' was a popular tune of the day. I recall my brother and I trying to sing it as our Dad walked us through Finsbury Park to the viewing platform by the ECML, north of FP station. I would have been aged five or so. My little legs dangling over the wall, Dad with a gentle hold on me. Many 47's, peaks and the like, but then a mysterious, distant drone growing.. A sense of anticipation tempered with trepidation and.....

     

    Kapow! A blast of the two tones as she tore past and I would never be the same. For years after I would badger him; 'Dad! Can we go and see the 'sad eyes' train?'

     

    I went back recently. The little viewing platform had been torn down, and all of a sudden I felt old. I should have left it in the memory.

    Still, a trip on Alycidon with the missus next month should see me wibbling like an idiot. I have informed her that it may 'get a bit dusty'.

     

    Regards,

    Bernie

    • Like 4
  3. The geezer's always been bob on to me. Some of the chairs are shagged, but hey, whatever. At £5/500 a bag, I'll take a 5-10% hit.

    Cracking bloke, wish him the best.

     

    Hayfield, you gonna be at Aylesbury on the Sunday?

     

    Bern

  4. I'm thick as mince, but not as useful. But regarding this whole yellow business. OK my eyes aren't the 20/20 sharpshooters they once were, but here I can at least offer evidence!

    post-31145-0-19834400-1533177182_thumb.jpg

     

    (Gameshow host voice) "And our first lady strolling in with bendy P4 timbers.... followed up by a cheeky buggeration of a 1 in 9! Oh look, viewers, here's the star of the show on the right, some Hornby!"

    Yellow?

     

    Bern

  5. I'll chip in a few words if I may.. Major props to Drew, Harry and Lee for towing us around, offering a great amount of info, and generally being top hosts. Thanks to Didcot Railway Centre and it's staff, and thanks to the other members of our 'crew' for making it a cracking day out.

    Stick my name down for the next one. And the next.

    Utterly recommended, the thought and planning that went into it must have been quite an effort; concise information delivered with humour, yet practised and professional. Stars, the lot of you!

     

    Cheers,

    Bernie

    • Like 3
  6. If you are going to leave an iron switched off for a few days/weeks, thoroughly clean whilst hot (I go brass wool, wipe, tip cleaner, brass wool) and load the tip with cored leaded solder. Poke in the holder and switch off. Next time you switch on, solder melts, quick wipe and good to go!

    It's easier to clean a hot tip, and you'll look forward to your next session knowing your tip is tip top!

     

    edit, like Guy says, brass soldering and rosin flux may be another kettle of fish, I have two irons so lecky and brass jobs are kept away from each other. I do know of one modeller that has used cored leaded solder for absolutely everything, and he seems to have done everything!

    Bernie

  7. It's a quandary. Can you offset the cost of the machinery? Or if you go the manual route, can you be bothered to do the graft each time, bearing in mind you will need a decent vice, files etc as tractor alludes to.

     

    My last and only light engineering works near me charges for each setting.. £5 to look at it, £5 to put it on the machine, £5 for x1 x cut, etc,, it mounts up. I use them, but I don't have much choice. But it becomes a pain when a simple turning/cut job gets to £45 plus vat.

     

    WRT to model stuff, I reckon it would be worth it, but it is a heck of a laying on of cash. hmm.

    Tenner for a chassis, and you'd have queues. But then you wouldn't want to be messing around prototyping!

     

    A thought; a dimensional database of mazak infected models, cnc on demand out of steel?

     

     

    Bernie

  8. OK. Some excellent discourse has occurred here, a jolly good thing I haven't said anything..

     

    Can I refer to the opening post? Why would a respected (certainly by me), and obviously talented scratchbuilder decide to light the blue touch paper, when his own superb efforts fall down at the basic level of gauge?

    By no means am I attempting a gauge wars type diversion (I play at P4 and 00, and may yet switch over to EM and 00 after seeing Hornsey Broadway), but the premise strikes me as glass houses.

     

    Still, horses for courses. If your talent subscribes, do the modelling. If your talent doesn't, do the modelling. Many happy suprises may lay in wait.

     

    As the old saying goes, 'If you think can or you think you cannot, you're probably right.'

     

    Well that was hardly worth sobering up for, sorry.

     

    Still a bit pissed,

    Bern

  9. I had a 'Wirbelwind' with knackered wheels and a missing track. My mum found an old Airfix tender on her rounds to the shops.

    I imagined myself as a forward thinking Barnes Wallis type of chap after I mounted the turret onto the coal load.

     

    Towed around by a class 47 with a squad of commandos in an 'Arnold sands' wagon.

     

    What a wally.

     

    Bern

    • Like 3
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