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inside crank

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  1. I've just come across this, and it is truly superb. Not only is the modelling of the highest standard but it is very evocative of the period and location, having been born and raised in Essex. Which prompts me to comment that the station at Stratford St. Mary is a dead ringer for the one at Braintree.
  2. Your comments are much appreciated. So far it's going as well as I had hoped it might. For me, it's knowing my limitations. And yes, it is a modified Dunster station (strictly speaking it's the later Fordhampton version). I turned it through 180 degrees, clad it in plasticard and left off the roof extension.
  3. Thanks. I wanted to create an industrial landscape that has a somewhat claustrophobic quality. I have always been very admiring of layouts where a continuous back drop of factories and high retaining walls have been built from scratch and which serve to dominate the railway in the foreground. Unfortunately my own scratch building skills are somewhat limited, so I have to rely on using individual kits which I personally don't think are quite so effective in that respect.
  4. All the photos posted so far have been taken on my camera phone, which has demonstrated itself to be idiot proof. (Very useful in my case). However I have had a go at using a 35mm digital camera, although it's much harder to set up and has poorer accessibility due to its bulk. Are the pictures of a higher quality? The colour reproduction is possibly more accurate and maybe they are less grainy.
  5. I have also been trying to improve the quality of the photos that I post . I have moved the overhead LED strip light. so that it's no longer overhead as it was casting very dark shadows and I've brought in a adjustable reading lamp to light the specific areas that I'm trying to photograph. i think that it has worked to some extent and gives me an excuse for some more gratuitous shots. Apologies for the Class 15 and Derby Lightweight appearing so often in the pics. I do possess other rolling stock, but not having any sort of storage yard means that I have to manually place them on the layout which is a bit of a faff.
  6. Well it's been a while. Progress has been limited, but I have added another back scene to the back of the layout appropriately enough. It has also gained a signal box, water tower, low relief north light factory and footbridge. As shown below................
  7. Hello again. I recently shot a short video for my grandson so I thought I'd post a link here. Apart from anything else it proves trains can actually run on the layout unlike the posed photos I have posted so far. It will cost you about 3 minutes of your life, never to be regained and being a 'tailchaser' it is somewhat repetitive. https://youtu.be/8gmrbOZXAcA
  8. Thanks gents for your interest. I had a look at some of your layouts James, and they are mighty impressive. Your latest 0 gauge and 00 gauge are looking really good. The canal in 'Haxton Lane' is splendid. I did have a list of desirable elements to try and include in 'Lofthouse Bridge' and one of them was a water feature. Unfortunately I don't have the space, even for a culvert. I don't know how you can be so prolific in building layouts. Mine seems to progress at snail's pace. I remember being told once that amateurs can either lay bricks quickly or well. You must be one of those rare people who can do both.
  9. And here are the rest of them.................................
  10. So I seem to have inadvertently created two new topics, when I tried to update this thread on Saturday. (I have to admit that I haven't really got a clue when it comes to this posting malarky - as you no doubt will have gathered by now). Anyway, to keep everything together in the original thread I am re-publishing the latest update here. I hope.
  11. I have also acquired my wife's old camera 'phone which has given me an excuse to take some gratuitous shots. The first two capture a bit of development in the goods yard, including some ground cover and additional building. More general views of nothing in particular. Finishing with the 'looking through the bridge' cliché. Still, it makes a change from the bus on bridge.
  12. It's been a while since I last posted here. Now that summer's here, other things vie for my attention and particularly the garden. However some progress has been made on the train set. Not least an area that has been developed into an industrial site containing various mills and warehouses. Here is the photographic evidence. Bored yet?................
  13. Since I last posted I have put some more structures onto the layout including the modified Walters Cornerstone warehouse and a kit bashed boiler house. I have also added a low profile factory unit made from the Fordhampton locomotive depot............ And added a fuelling point and oil depot. The fuelling point and oil depot are the ubiquitous Knightwing and Ratio kits respectively. (I should have brushed the dirt off the fuelling point before photographing it) I think in the future I might just use the mobile phone to take photos as it seems to do a much better job than the compact camera. Pics 1,2 and 4 were taken with the phone. I'm not sure about the placement of the boiler house relative to the warehouse either
  14. Since I last posted I have put some more structures onto the layout including the modified Walters Cornerstone warehouse and a kit bashed boiler house.

    20230307_114027.jpg.891dc29b8a12a3fd4a5fee244691ca27.jpg

     

    20230307_111845.jpg.0cd8f514e8fe027818490b9b406f6a55.jpg

     

    I have also added a low profile factory unit made from the Fordhampton locomotive depot............

    20230307_114019.jpg.b51e51b18587fa91eafb8888274e8f55.jpg

     

     

    And added a fuelling point and oil depot. The fuelling point and oil depot are the ubiquitous Knightwing and Ratio kits respectively. (I should have brushed the dirt off the fuelling point before photographing it)

    P1000640.JPG.a0f33ff53bdbfdd021bdd1bec35dfb3c.JPG

     

    P1000641.JPG.a98508dc689d81d821d440ca859c3199.JPG

     

    P1000633.JPG.76521b8169765e6718f18731c8ee17f0.JPG

     

    I think in the future I might just use the mobile phone to take photos as it seems to do a much better job than the compact camera. Pics 1,2 and 4 were taken with the phone.

    I'm not sure about the placement of the boiler house relative to the warehouse either

  15. I have been doing a conversion of a second hand Walters Cornerstone warehouse that I got from a well known auction site. I Have modified it to allow me to run trains inside. i have also changed the roofline to make it look less American, but I'm not sure how successful that has been. Here it is compared to how the original is meant to look.

    front_street_warehouse_933-3069_big.jpg

    warehouse conversion.jpg

    1. Show previous comments  2 more
    2. The Johnster

      The Johnster

      Which of course you can leave off or replace with a cast iron jobby.

       

       

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      Here for your perusal is Dimbath Deep Navigation no.2 (see how I've suggested the existence of an entire no.1 pit without having to model it), Britishified with NCB notices and neglect.  Note the half-built canteen and pithead baths in the background, severely mutilated Kitmaster 'modern shop with flat' kit with scaffolding, more Britishness as the NCB, formed in 1947, promised canteens and pithead baths are all it's collieries and built them during the early 50s. so this is a period 'pin' as well.  You will be relieved to hear that some tidying up has taken place since the photo was taken, though a colliery should be quite messy!  The chimney and water tank are now straightened...

       

      Backstory (I like backstories) is that the pit was developed with government money during WW2 after a seam of particularly high quality low sulphur coking coal was opened up; the other colliery buildings pre-date this.  The tippler/loader is of course Walther's Cornerstone 'Diamond Coal' kit, steel frame corrugated sheeting, looking perfectly at home in South Wales with it's air of general neglect and poor quality wartime austerity paint job.  It is of course intended to represent an Appalachian 'level' or 'slope' drift mine, but a conveyor up from the headframe sorts that out.  Headframe is a DAPR 3D print, £28.

       

      It's 'H0ness' is revealed in the stairways, and (if you want to rivet count) the doorways, but is not obvious or completely implausible.  It was a joy to build, Amercican quality, very little flash and everthing fitted perfectly.  IIRC I paid £48 new for it, cf Bachmann Scencraft Pithead for 5p short of £60 beer vouchers and that's before you think about tipplers, washeries, fan houses, boiler houses, pump rooms &c.  There's no comparison; Walther's are way ahead of the game in everthing except scale, and that doesn't matter as much as you'd think it would with these larger industrial buildings.  Absolutely the right choice for my colliery, two loading roads and the slack bin, brilliant, no connection happy customer.

       

       

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    3. inside crank

      inside crank

      You certainly get a lot for your money. It's a very impressive structure. I did toy with the idea of a pit scene when I was first imagining my layout (notice I didn't say planning it), but decided that I wouldn't have the space to do it justice. Instead I opted for a small gas works.

      By the way, I like the scaffolding around the canteen in the background. It's a nice touch.

    4. The Johnster

      The Johnster

      Thanks; it's exactly the look I was going for.  Kit from Scale Model Scenery, comes with ladders, cement mixer, a skip (too modern for me) and a shovel. 

       

      Collieries do take up a lot of room, even South Wales ones on restricted valley floor sites, and despite the overwhelming bulk and 'presence' of Diamond Coal, mine is actually quite cramped, 3 sidings capable of taking 9 wagons (the longest train the layout can handle anyway) and two shorter ones, and Diamond can 'only' handle 3 wagons per road under the loader; twice that number would be more typical.  The weighbridge is on the approach road, which is not really an ideal place for it but there's no room anywhere else; it is assumed that it can be locked out of use while trains are shunted over it.  Wagons often have to be positioned on the loader roads during shunting.  I probably wouldn't have been able to find a site for it had the room not had the inglenook in that position, and even then the other buildings are up on the mountainside (not unprototypical for South Wales).

       

      Diamond replaces a Faller 'Old Mine' kit, which looked much less British and had a bit of a 'Snow White and the Seven Persons Of Restricted Growth' feel to it, but The Squeeze, who is Polish and whose father is a Silesian miner, says it is typica6l of such buildings in her part of the world.  'Old Mine' took up more room and had only one loading road; Diamond is much better, and I have never regretted buying it.  If I had more room, I'd be going in for the Cornerstone Coke Ovens as well.

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