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mainly 7mm scale, mainly GWR but not exclusively...
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kitpw started following God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen
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Thanks Mikkel - much entertained (and informed) by that and Farthing too, throughout the year.
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kitpw started following GWR 3 plank wagons appreciation thread
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GWR 3 plank wagons appreciation thread
kitpw replied to drduncan's topic in GWR Rolling Stock: model and prototype
From BFI - a slightly clearer version of 'Windsor Castle'. It includes a ringed distant signal which Is why I have it bookmarked - https://player.bfi.org.uk/free/film/watch-the-brilliant-biograph-2020-online. -
The station building: Walls and gables
kitpw commented on Mikkel's blog entry in The Farthing layouts
(If I remember rightly) it's called "French Second Empire" style, characterised by mansard roofs. Quite why it was seen as appropriate for GWR station buildings, I cannot imagine. -
The station building: Walls and gables
kitpw commented on Mikkel's blog entry in The Farthing layouts
I think you should award yourself several bites for the building so far (and several more when it's done, I dare say). -
Might help - https://www.axminstertools.com/axminster-precision-centre-finding-rule-ax96220
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Overview... yes! The hole in the wall is made. The viaduct is made but as yet undetailed - no rivets and detail. The current header shows the hole (old photo). The baseboard for Vineyard Hill will wait on finding the Vineyard Hill end of the viaduct to get the location exact, (it was nearly a ferro-cement viaduct but...). The viaduct is a separate "baseboard" which can be removed and the hole shuttered against the cold. Then, before winter sets in, "car port" (model port) baseboard making. The modeller's apprentice has learned much from Swan Hill but has a long way to go yet. Kit PW
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I hope so... as trains at Swan Hill run round outside the station (run round loops inside seem to take more than their share of very limited space), the extension to Vineyard Hill permits that and increases overall movement activity. Ah yes, the eternal city... Kit PW
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The modeller's apprentice - October 2023 Phase 1 [incomplete]: the layout model ends with a short viaduct at the right hand end, Phase 2: the semi-external [car port] type structure is complete and the layout is to be extended through the wall to Vineyard Hill. Phase 2: there is room for a yard at the right hand end - about 7', which is a bit short. It can be extended further if needs be into an adjacent shed: maybe it will, maybe it won't. It depends if the trains get long enough. The viaduct is under construction - pictures to follow. The grid is 300mm , the layout about 2' at its narrowest and widens to about 3' at Vineyard Hill. Kit PW
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kitpw started following Grim-up-North; Goathland, Queensbury & Bradford. and East African railways miscellany
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Everywhere I've ever been in the world, 'the chairman' has got there first with his indestructable garden seating and coffee tables, always the same pattern. There they are, under the tree... Nice blog by the way, the aluminium Metro-Cammel coaches are wonderful things.
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Traeth Mawr -Building Mr Price's house , (mostly)
kitpw replied to ChrisN's topic in The Railways of Wales
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kitpw started following MikeOxon's Broad Gauge Blog
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kitpw started following Copenhagen to Penzance by rail
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...and all over late Victorian / turn of the century London as well. ...a bit earlier I think: the storey heights suggest it could be pretty old, possibly a timber frame which has had a brick facade added by way of an upgrade or repair. The ground outside appears to have been graded to respect an earlier road/pavement level. A nice collection of buildings. At less than £3 s/h, the Observer's Book of Architecture (I think now out of print) is an excellent investment. Amazon have several for sale: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Observers-Architecture-Forewordby-Written-Illustrated/dp/1854710397. Very good for a general sense of dating and style.
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Diagram 0.2 was almost the same but had a single arc roof. The 3 arc roof type is diagram 0.1 as it has the top framing finished with a heavy, full width straight as per the illustration in your post: diagram 0.3 is also 3 arc, same dimensions, but the top rail is also 3 arc following the roof line, not a straight. There is a photo of 0.1 and 0.3 with C19th lettering style with GWR on the top plank in Slinn & Clarke's GW siphons HMRS 1986 edition. Let me know if you need a copy of relevant pages - I think the book is now out of print. (the 7mm scratch built model I've 'unfinished' for several years is diagram 0.2).
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kitpw started following More Pre-Grouping Wagons in 4mm - the D299 appreciation thread.
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kitpw started following The Farthing layouts
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There is a summary of the history of "containerisation" here: http://www.conflat.co.uk/con_hist.html "The origins of containerisation on Britain's Railways can be traced right back to their very beginning - although the idea took more than 100 years to catch on! In the 1830s the Liverpool & Manchester Railway used "simple rectangular boxes, four to a waggon, ...to convey coal from the Lancashire collieries to Liverpool, where they were transferred to horse-drawn carts by crane" But although there were some advantages, in particular the reduced handling of the cargo, the idea does not appear to have caught on. Even so, by the early 1900s the London & North Western, Lancashire & Yorkshire, and Midland Railway companies were carrying 'box coal' on flat wagons, the coal being destined for use by steamboats. The original Great Central Railway also played a part in the story of containerisation, being one of only three companies which provided special wagons for the conveyance of 'fish tanks'. The GCR carried considerable fish traffic and the 'fish tanks' were designed to ensure that the fish reached its destination as fresh as possible. As such, the wagons were classified as passenger stock. The other two companies were the Midland and the Great Northern; the latter referred to its containers as 'cod boxes' and some of them lasted into the 1930s. By the late 19th Century the closed container was with us. Resembling a wooden box van body, but with end doors, these were initially known as 'lift vans' and were privately owned by several furniture removal firms. They were carried both on railway wagons and on flat road trailers drawn by horses or steam tractors. The 'box coal' is familiar in model form - the 'cod boxes' I've been unable to find, model or prototype. There was some discussion on RMweb a few years ago about fish traffic but I don't think it covered 'cod boxes' - as a search term on RMweb, it returns no results.