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Philou

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Posts posted by Philou

  1. Hello chums and chumesses,

     

    On the home straight - the club's accounts are balanced without any cooking, I may add. There had been a lot of movement this year through the accounts but only because the club had been able to attend a lot more shows and exhibitions than before and everything fell into place - but there were a lot of loose threads that needed tying first.

     

    It all took much, much longer than anticipated as the itemised sheet has twice as many entries compared to last year, hence no modelling at all and no update yesterday! Tomorrow is the AGM and I have a huge pile of paper to dish out :( so I'll probably be away most of the day. Can I hope to do a bit on Sunday?

     

    Cheers everyone and I'll let you know how I get on.

     

    Philip

     

     

    • Like 1
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  2.  

    Being curious, I just went to have a look at Google Earth and Cherry Orchard. It has very much changed since I went there as I walked under the bridge in c.2000. All the landscaping has grown up.

     

    image.png.3f461f95968b8cb4e763255a1e832244.png

     

    ^ You can still see the NG alignment (the shadowed area) parallel to the road and where it went under the road on a skew to come out parallel to the road on the other side towards the roundabout - the light green track. As you can see, at the top right of the elongated 'S' of the NG alignment, there's nothing left of the brickworks. IIRC, it was mainly the land to the west of the road (the left-hand side) that was worked and in the summer only - presumably it being too wet in the winter. No pits were dug, but they worked the area alternatively taking the clay off in thinnish layers and coming back perhaps a year or two later.

     

    image.png.d1b3085d4ee7130a57b3443b8b6018bc.png

     

    ^ However, the Google camera has been down the original Cherry Orchard Lane and lo! a piece of the original NG crossing is still in place (between the two arrowheads - didn't know how to get rid of them!) where the loco and trucks are crossing the lane shown in @scalerailmodelling 's link in the top post.

     

    Things you find - eh?

     

    Cheers,

     

    Philip

  3. The mention of Cherry Orchard brickworks by @Nearholmer and @scalerailmodelling reminds me that Essex CC at great expense built an overbridge when they constructed a new road at Cherry Orchard so as not to hinder the railway (nor have a NG line crossing their new road) and insofar as I am aware, the bridge was never used by the rail line. When I left Essex CC in 2011, the brickworks seemed to have been abandoned. I was unaware that there may have been some NG stock lurking on the site (I would have had a look otherwise ;) ).

     

    Cheers,

     

    Philip

    • Funny 1
  4. I'm afraid finances trumped modelling today - everything came together but as I've only got the bank statements to work from, I'm lacking the receipt details to put expenditure in its right category (oh yes, no lumping of everything into one column!). The proper accounts, as done by the mairies over here, can have a fair few hundred codes for all sorts of different expenditure - we're spared that!

     

    The day was partially taken up by Mrs Philou wanting to access the new contract with SFR and unable to get her password to work - as with every other site she seems to access - I have no idea of what goes on. I just type in the info required and away I go. By the time that was sorted it wasn't really worth starting any modelling.

     

    Tomorrow will probably be a non-modelling day too as I need to go see Hon. Chair and Hon. Sec and fill in the details and do a proper cooking of the books (only kidding - honest!) so that the accounts are in a form that are clear to anyone who would like to have a look at the details, no point doing accounts otherwise.

     

    I dish out a four-liner for the members to approve at the AGM that just shows start of year balance, end of year balance, income total and outgoing total. There is an accompanying generalised breakdown of income and outgoings (where things are lumped together). The detailed output where everything is grouped by class of expenditure is attached to the minutes but I don't distribute that, but it is available to view by everyone. This last sheet and the approved four-liner is what would be sent to the Préfecture if asked.

     

    Hey ho - and people wonder why the retired never have any time!

     

    More tomorrow,

     

    Cheers,

     

    Philip

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  5. Good news! Despite the over-night snow (only about 10mm) the SFR technician turned up and started giving the existing cabling the once over. 'Harrumph. The existing telephone cable's buried in your wall.' 'Not so. Just where it came out was a touch of plaster applied to give a nice finish to the paint.' He then observed that the phone cable then went into an internal conduit which, as I explained to him, goes into a roof space where it goes into a box and then splits up to serve 5 outlets.

     

    Despite the cold, he didn't want a hot drink and set off back outside and tied the new fibre cable to the existing telephone cable and then came inside again, up his telescopic ladder and pulled the old cable that came through the wall without resistance drawing the new behind.  He pulled a huuuuuge length of new into the house and then tied the end of it to the the bit hanging out of the internal conduit. Off he went taking his telescopic ladder to the roof space. 'There's light already laid in there for you'. 'Hmmph, fibre-glass.' 'Yup, fibre-glass insulation.'

     

    No more was said and he drew the old and new through the conduit into the roof space and then proceeded to try and determine which cable went where as I never marked them - not ever intending to touch them again. After half an hour of tugging on the cables (all CAT 5) and no success, I started to tug at my end to see if he could detect which one was moving - no luck. I asked him eventually what it was he wanted to do. Turns out he wanted, for reasons of aesthetics, to pass his fibre through my conduit into the roof space and then back down to where the terminal box was to go - distance of over 20m.

     

    Why do it the hard way? The terminal box would only be 5m away from where it came in from the outside - d'oh! Mrs Philou and I said just take a short cut and we'll hide the cable by either painting it white from its existing black or put it inside some self-adhesive mini-conduit. The inside job was then completed in 5mins! I have a length of black fibre cable to paint later and it so happens, I'm going to have re-decorate anyway as it's been a very long time since the walls were white-washed (oh yes, real white wash!).

     

    By midday, we were wired up and I'm connected - it's not blazing fast as this laptop is starting to get old (tested it on another system and it was veeeery slow) - but it's x9 faster than before, so I'm happy.

     

    No modelling update and the club's finances must take priority tomorrow as I'm legally obliged to present accounts due to the laws (not regulations) governing societies (Associations) over here.

     

    Toodle pip,

     

    More tomorrow,

     

    Philip

     

     

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  6. 8 hours ago, JeffP said:

    That'll be France Telecom-Orange, then?

     

    We..e..e..ell yes but no but ...... apparently France Telecom as an entity doesn't really exist - it's all Orange. In this département, the overseeing cable backbone provider (the physical bit) is Orange and the fibre here was laid outside the door 4 years ago and we were expecting great things then - but we are the very last district to be physically connected to it. To break up the Orange monopoly as a provider it was specified that once the backbone was laid ANY provider could have access and do the final connection. We've gone with SFR as they're the only ones that bothered to call and sell their wares.

     

    The département also specified that the connection to the fibre from a private dwelling should be free - as in free beer whether 4m or 400m away. The downside is that our final bit of the connection from the house to the main will be aerial despite the fact that the conduit is outside the door and the draw-cable was put in place last summer. The whole shebang has cost the département €200M in cable laying and final connection to the box inside the house.

     

    As ever the optimist, it should all be done tomorrow, but in case there's no message on here tomorrow night, you'll guess that we have had a problem! If the technician cuts us adrift from Orange and doesn't reconnect us, then we're stuffed as there'll be no phone - fixed or mobile and therefore no t'intertubes either!

     

    Fingers crossed.

     

    Cheers,

     

    Philip

     

    PS: I did say rather flippantly yesterday that today was our third Christmas meal - wrong! Mrs Philou did the maths at table today - the seventh!

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  7. Well tomorrow came and went and became today with nothing done except putting some wrappers around the buttress caps and then wrapping up parcels for our second (or is it third) Christmas lunch. Bit of a house clean too as with three cats and the hairy Lump, there tends to be a collection of tumbleweed sized hairballs that chase each other around the floors ..............

     

    So that is it for a few days - Christmas lunch, then a Sunday birthday party lunch and Monday fibre is being connected from the street to the house - yay! However, I have to get the club's financial report ready for the AGM a week tomorrow so there'll be much getting paperwork up to date - another day I think. So just maybe Wednesday I can get back to 'work' :))) .

     

    Cheers everyone - enjoy the weekend as it's just begun!

     

    Philip

    • Friendly/supportive 5
  8. Hello everyone,

     

    It was a start ...... and that was about it, really. I did go into the barn and it wasn't as cold as I thought and retrieved the wall that I had nearly finished before the holidays, made some slight adjustments to the fit and grabbed all my materials to continue cutting and papering. Unfortunately Mrs Philou's friend (and mine) called around and an exchange of holiday notes ensued - that was modelling time down the pan before lunch.

     

    After lunch it was walkies and I hadn't been in long when our Dutch neighbour called by for a further exchange of holiday notes and to say they were off tomorrow - so most of the afternoon disappeared too. I did manage however to get the third pilaster made up and all the copings cut ready to finish off. This led me to have altercations with the printer as I couldn't do what I wanted to do directly from the laptop and had to use the titchy tiny screen on the printer to enable an enlargement of a copy of some stonework to be printed. Hoorah! you'll all be saying - but no - Mrs Philou has lost her Hotmail account password and she can't access her Gmail one either (incorrect password) so the last of the afternoon was spent trying to sort that out - but I'm none the wiser despite having sent my inside leg measurements and the promise of a kidney from my first born to Microsoft so we can recover the account - I'm not holding out much hope!!

     

    I might get a little done tomorrow morning before we head off to Big town to buy enough food for Christmas lunch on Saturday (yes another Christmas lunch - this time with my daughter, partner, grandson and his other grandmother plus world and dog :)) )

     

    I think I may have over estimated the amount of work I felt I should have got done today. Never mind, it'll come together - eventually!

     

    More tomorrow - maybe.

     

    Cheers,

     

    Philip

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  9. Hello chums and chumesses,

     

    Well the New Year has definitely begun, so welcome back! I'm home and so is Mrs Philou plus dog. Rain, rain, and more rain for 500miles! Oh, and the strong cross-winds on the motorway today - not much fun at all - but we got back a little before nightfall to a very cold house but three happy cats who were pleased to see us - awww.

     

    No modelling today - can't think why though.

     

    Restart tomorrow even if for only a short time as I expect the barn will have cooled right down as well.

     

    More tomorrow,

     

    Cheers,

     

    Philip

    • Like 5
    • Friendly/supportive 2
  10. Today's the day! I'm doing this now as it'll be hectic later and likely to be rather jolly to, so ........... Happy New Year to you all and thank you for your thumbs up and support in my endeavour. Hopefully progress will continue at a good pace through 2024 - real life notwithstanding!

    Good luck too with your particular layouts/constructions.

    Best wishes,

    Philip

    • Like 6
    • Friendly/supportive 2
  11. Mmmmm ..... sounds like you all had a good Christmas. Beef Wellington, curried goat, beef rib, c(h)apon (we had that), pud ...... mmmmmm. I do have a hankering for a good UK style Xmas dinner despite having been here 21 years - pigs in blanket, devil on horseback, the little trimmings that just make it so - British - yes and even the humble Brussels sprout tossed in the frying pan with finely cut bacon - even the kids eat that!

     

    Have a good day,

     

    Philip

    • Like 6
  12. 2 hours ago, 37Oban said:

    Been there, it's not a good time to visit, 

     

    I understand that it's probably not a good thing to wait that long anyway - something to do with warranties, or somesuch .........

     

    How are you all? Fed up or just fedup? Hope you've had some plum pud - none here unfortunately :( .

    • Friendly/supportive 1
  13. Ooh, I forgot to say that Mrs Philou came up trumps as she had got from my fave emporium Lord & Butler, a Rapido 15XX with sound, no less, and without any hints  my end!

     

    Nice looking loco in lined black and early crest, but I may have to wait until 2157 to run it in (2157 is a date mentioned in the accompanying notes).

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  14. Hello chums and chumesses and hello to all those that may pop in from time to time.

     

    Christmas seems to have arrived as today was gift wrapping and suitcase filling and major angst as to whether 'The Lump' will be able to get into the car - a rather high sill and she isn't quite as agile as she may have been (35kg). I did suggest to Mrs Philou that we could attach the lead to the rear bumper and let her run behind - plenty of exercise I thought over the 200 mile dap. The idea wasn't well received and I can't think why.

     

    On a more serious note, all the above meant that there was very little progress on the latest retaining wall, so I'll hold it over until we get back after the New Year.

     

    As I shall be unlikely to be in communication with the outside world until early January (c'mon, no tears - it's only 10 days), it just remains for me to wish you all a very Merry Christmas (or Season's Greetings) and very Happy New Year. I sincerely hope that you'll all have reasonable health and a little wealth in 2024.

     

    Oh, and the weekend has arrived!

     

    Cheers,

     

    Philip

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  15. 9 minutes ago, figworthy said:

    the evenings are already drawing out (a whole minute so far), but the mornings are still drawing in

     

    When the Met. Office was the Met. Office and they provided the weather forecast I remember Ian MacAskill used to make a point that for a few days after the solstice (winter/summer) there was an imbalance in the gain/loss of daylight and it wasn't evenly spread - to do with the earth's 'wobble' IIRC.

     

    The third retaining wall is under way and I'm partway through putting the building papers on it - no photo at the mo', but maybe one later - if not, tomorrow as there will be the pilaster, cappings and corbels to make and attach.

     

    Cheers,

     

    Philip

    • Like 5
  16. 14 hours ago, Andy Hayter said:

    It is at something like 04:20 CET

     

    I don't suppose it will matter much as I shall be tucked up in bed at that time!

     

    I never knew that the leap years affected the solstice - do they also affect the summer ones as well?

     

    I note in France that their meteorological service count the start of winter as on the 1st of December - furriners .... mumble mumble .......

     

    Cheers,

     

    Philip

    • Like 2
  17. @lezz01 Are you trying to make me spend some money? The right angled driver looks just right especially with a 6mm hex end. I've done what I needed to do so it'll be a straight-forward vertical drive to fix the wall in it's final position.

     

    Nice loco - but will the wheels cost more than the loco? Just asking for a friend ;)).

     

    Cheers,

     

    Philip

    • Like 1
  18. Hello chums and chumesses,

     

    Finally Mrs Philou decided to go to Big town on her own and I was left to my own devices - so into the barn I went. The latest retaining wall was dusted in dark pastel colours as appropriate then wafted over with a couple of coats of matt varnish. It was all fixed in place before Mrs Philou returned for lunch - and I have a photo of the wall in place:

     

     

     

     

     

    P1020485.JPG.c90fecc97d2f1a1caa81a4ddb3ffdd10.JPG

     

    P1020486.JPG.4384f26f8914d256244e66831e5a85b6.JPG

     

    ^ Two shots of the wall in place - I'm quite happy with the result, though the camera is showing it slightly more yellow with the flash than in natural light.

     

    It sort of went downhill afterwards as I wanted to set up the retaining wall alongside the branchline parallel to the mainline. Using my way of glue blocks screwed to the retaining wall and the underside of the trackbed, I found there wasn't enough room to get a screwdriver between the wall  and the rockface and I wasted an hour looking for a mini ratchet set that I thought I could use at right angles with an adapter for the Torx screws that I use - nada, nyet, nein, nothing. In the end I just unscrewed the trackbed and attached the retaining wall to it to check the glueblock alignments and that was it - 10mins and it was done - should have done it that way in the first instance!

     

    I'm underway with the next piece of wall - it'll be of a similar construction and finish to the two others. I'm not sure how much time I'll be allowed tomorrow but hopefully enough to get the card faces cut, papered and glued in place.

     

    Cheers everyone - tomorrow is the shortest day and we should then be rushing headlong into summer - yay!

     

    More tomorrow,

     

    Philip

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  19. No update today as council business ate my time - the only thing I will note is that I forgot to put in some weep-holes along the bottom of the brickwork - and I have a small punch with which I could have done it :( . I'll try and remember next time.

     

    Mrs Philou is away tomorrow going to Big town to do some last minute bits and bobs and I might be spared the trip so there's a good chance that the wall will be weathered and fixed in place.

     

    More tomorrow,

     

    Cheers,

     

    Philip

    • Like 5
  20. Hello @Cliff M and welcome to the RMWeb collective!

     

    You've just asked a question to which you will have a million (OK not quite) answers. Thumbs up for Scalescenes buildings - they take a while to build but you can print off as many copies as you like and alter them too. Another thumbs up for SCARM - my under construction layout was designed with it. If you like computers and can do 3D, SketchUp is quite good too and I created the final layout in that to get a feel of what it should look like.

     

    You've asked about DCC - I can only comment on what I bought as I decided that I would go DCC from the off on retirement, despite having amassed a huge amount of stock over the years. I went for the ESU ECoS II, wasnt cheap but not the most expensive (apparently) out there. It has all the bells and whistles and will control two trains at once on individual controls plus all your accessories. Oh and it has a large touch-sensitive screen for ease of control. You can also use hand-held controllers via wiffy but not Bluetooth.

     

    However, being a bit of a Luddite AND seeing how big the layout will actually be, I've decided to divide the layout into zones and each area will have a mimic board with good ol' fashioned mini-DPDTs and LEDs for the point control in each zone.

     

    Good to see that you're going for Peco streamline (with some set track) and electrofrogs.

     

    You haven't as yet posted a plan to show your proposal and I don't know if you've thought of gradients but the shallower the better avoiding anything steeper than 1:50 (if you can) as some locos can hardly pull the skin of a rice pudding once faced with a gradient. You should be fine with Bachmann not the cheapest, but don't discount other makes. There's a whole load of good locos and stock out there (some poor of course), but even Hornby turns out good stuff.

     

    Good luck,

     

    Cheers,

     

    Philip

     

    PS: If you want to have a look at the layout (WiP), type 'Dymented' (without the '') in the search bar above.

  21. Hello chaps and chapesses,

     

    Good news - Christmas at the Philou household is cancelled! No it isn't, but Santa came twice today.

     

    Firstly, a nice parcel arrived by the postlady from the UK. @lezz01 kindly sent me some bridge chairs and six pieces of Exactoscale bullhead rail so I can do the timber baulks on my bridge. What a good chap he is - thanks Lez, it was very much appreciated.

     

    Secondly, my BiL called in with my sister and brought me my two pieces of pointwork all the way from Cardiff - another good chap. I did also note that surreptitiously (but ol' eagle eyes saw) a Rapido box changed hands between him and Mrs Philou. I looked away and I haven't tried to find out what it was, so it'll be a big surprise - yay!

     

    Buoyed up by all of this, I did some overtime this evening (hence the late update) and completed this bit of retaining wall, and I have a photo:

     

    P1020479.JPG.9c17b8dec57bdda9f407329e6307fe53.JPG

     

    ^ It will need to be weathered and given a waft of varnish - perhaps tomorrow, but I've got council business to attend to - and then fixed into place. The fixing will be done via the tongue under the wall. Two glue blocks are to be screwed to it and then the blocks fixed onto the underside of the trackbed. Bit of a faff, but it'll be secure and I can't glue it as there's nowhere to get any purchase with mini-clamps while it's drying.

     

    All being well, it'll be fixed by Wednesday.

     

    Definitely more tomorrow.

     

    Cheers,

     

    Philip

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