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Nova Scotian

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Everything posted by Nova Scotian

  1. None, I’m ashamed to say. Life continues to get in my way.
  2. This is amazing. Thank you for such a detailed answer. I knew north British had gone out of business, and the changes coming at swindon and so had wondered if part of it was just running out of suitable and interested manufacturers.
  3. If this belongs somewhere else (Wheeltappers?) please let me know or move. Question is as simple as the title - as a fan the diesel hydraulics (who doesn't like a bantam weight underdog?), I hadn't thought about what the next technological step would be? Did any of the manufacturers have plans to follow-on from the Warships, Hymek and Westerns with another product? Something to rival the deltic? Another type4 to replace some of the warships and take on the Class 47? Obviously provision for ETH would have been needed Or had development stopped? If there were no more proposals, no more design and engineering - you can how it would add to the decision to end the western region experiment. I've looked around, I've dug into the depths of my memory - I remember something about a "super-western", but might be making that up? Possibly confusing the original design with the engines the other way around? I couldn't find anything on the google machine.
  4. So yes, I do believe we're close to that level of sophistication in robotics, or at least could be within a few years. Look to the use of robotics in medical device manufacturing - these are small batch, sometimes even individually customised, using (expensive) off-the-shelf robotics that can manipulate in multiple ways and axes. Where you're correct is the cost of implementing such a thing, as compared to manual assembly in a lower wage jurisdiction. Additionally the skillset required not just in the CAD, but the RPA behind that robot manipulating the product to perform its tasks. Manually coding each move just means you're racking up the wages of software engineers, rather than an assembly technician. It's amazing what manual tasks you can do away with - think sorting parts - massive chunk of parts pushed out of sprues - machine vision and a robot can quickly pick and sort into the correct bins. It can be taught to hold a piece and manually advance each time a command is given - eg by a worker who is attaching smaller details, and after each one the piece is reoriented and the worker has both hands available etc etc. When a manufacturer told me about a six axis machine they were installing I started counting the axes I knew (having wrapped my head around 5-axis CNC a few years back) - I got it wrong by the way, I missed the tilt, or the wrist turn or something. And a 7th axis is easy to add (moves in one direction along the floor). AGVs are now common in warehouses, simplifying material handling. So, no, I don't see reshoring from automation - the technology is getting closer but the capital expense versus the other options (manufacture and assemble in a low wage jurisdiction) just don't seem to make sense to me.
  5. I think about this topic often, and think there are a few other things to highlight. The assembly of the model is only part of the cost of the model when you purchase. The focus on "British manufacturing" ignores the main cost inputs into the price you pay. Various manufacturers have chimed in from time to time on this, as have a couple of the retailers. However, if you were to think about how to drive the price down for development, engineering, sourcing, manufacturing, assembling, distributing and selling a model railway locomotive "made in the UK" a few thoughts: - A major cost input is the molds for injection molded pieces, and many on here have discussed 3d printing. There's clearly a cut-off point in volume where it makes sense to create molds for a cheap variable part cost for injection molding (high fixed cost), and a higher variable cost for 3d printed. Advances in 3d printing may drive this down, but its still constrained by the quality of the product, and by the fact you're paying for machine hours. Machine hours is going to be key when we start thinking automation. If you can avoid the milling of molds you can reduce the development cost by ~100k. - Assembly costs and skills is an issue - perhaps you can reduce the part count, but the market has spoken on molded handrails etc. So what options are there? Greater automated milling/machining and drilling of major parts (if metal) may reduce the prep work and help bridge a skills gap. 3d printing will allow complex shapes to reduce part numbers, but it's not going to be a solution to very fine parts. In both cases the more minutes each body or part spends on the machine the higher the cost from that automation, as compared to someone hand assembling - which may be mating two plastic pieces from injection molding designed to fit together in a repetitive task. - Supply chains has already been mentioned - if you're planning on doing more than just assembling you're going to have to either rebuild a supply chain here or manufacture your own everything. If you're shipping all the components here from China for just final assembly is that what was intended? So, PCB printing isn't too hard, there are small batch outfits. Speaker manufacturing harder for low price commodity cube speaker stuff. Motor, can't think of anyone existing. Carbon brushes? etc etc. So there's a soft cost in setting up that procurement, or you're spending big fixed capital on equipment to manufacture your own. Look at how much loco wheels cost for a hobbiest in the UK... - Can you save money on design engineering? Possibly - take back some control over various stages and re-engineer PCBs etc to use domestic parts, you could also try and simplify production. Try and produce a small number of skus of say, motors and flywheels, now you're owning the final EP. But, your engineering staff are more expensive than the contract manufacturer overseas... Also, your attempt to cut back on SKUs can only be inside the product, because customers are demanding many different skus for each product. How often do we hear "I saw D1234 at Old Oak Common in 1964 in green with small yellow panels and the new pattern grille and NO MANUFACTURER HAS EVER SERVED ME"? Look at the variation in minor tooling to run all these different loco numbers, eras etc. Your customer skus are going to balloon and your internal ones will have to follow to some extend because the detail changes and artwork will drive that. - Shipping - yep, saving there - but although container prices (and air) have been bad, this is still just a container or two, for batches it's even just LTL - it's a pain, its thousands on a batch, but it's not doubling the production cost. - Retail channels - you could do direct selling and cut out the retailer - many do that already though and you can do it without reshoring production. - Marketing - do you need to put money there? Hard costs in promotion etc, but even just having a CEO take videos is a commitment of time with an opportunity cost elsewhere in the business. - It's also worth pointing out that any reshoring is going to be a large capital expenditure. That's going to have to be financed, probably through both debt and equity (given the scale of it) - which is going to be expensive. That capex will depreciate. You have to make it work, you have to push volume through it, and you have to be able to get a product margin greater than you did outsourced (either charge more, or it costs you less to produce). - The labour thing is probably a bit of a mixed bag. It's not likely to be well paid - so people won't move for those jobs. However, it's not like you can't find people who can not be trained for this nature of work. I've been in aerospace plants watching a final paint finish on a delicate component be done by hand by someone - painstaking work, doing hundreds of them a day. Look at the place mending your iphone screen etc. The dexterity is there, you just have to know where to find them, how to train them (and how to set up your production line), and then how to keep them. It's not impossible, industries get built from scratch all the time somewhere in the world, but it's a commitment of time and money. So, ultimately, the enemies of reshoring are probably, in not particular order: - Customer demand for fidelity - Supply chains to any reshored industry - Technological challenges in automation for this nature of manufacturing - meeting customer quality expectations re. fidelity, paint finish, longevity. - Machine hours for automated lines - machining/milling/printing - Large upfront cap-ex - Availability of labour, training of said labour, skills gap.
  6. So, yes in winter that's true, but that's problematic if you're not requiring space heating spring/summer/autumn. You're also heating the air close to the ceiling, as opposed to lower to the ground to create convection currents (think radiator placement).
  7. Others have said it, but my first and immediate thought was an electric element in the water heater. Second thought was the submersible pump - how old? Newer variable displacement pumps can save big. Third was the tumble dryer - I was lazy, but now am using clothes horse far more. Finally - lighting - it does add up. Our kitchen had 50w spotlights, nine of them. As they burned out I installed 7w LEDs, same light output. So now 63W compared to 450W, in a room that's often and well used. Helps keep the temperature down in the summer too. I use 7800kwh last year - three bedroom terraced house, electric heat only (eeek!). Electric water heater. etc etc. Different pricing over here though, I pay about 6p-7p per kwh and it's not going up as much as UK prices. I keep the house cool (17ish, less if my kids aren't here), try to be good with the lights etc. I expect lower consumption this year as I had my windows replaced - they were so bad you could see daylight between the panes and the frames. I've noticed my fridge is a power hog. I try to be better with covering saucepans when cooking, turning them off with a couple of minutes to go, using on the water needed in the kettle etc. Dishwasher runs on an energy cycle. TV etc all off at the mains However it only goes so far against structural issues (eg. your electricity pricing is unsustainable).
  8. Cost and availability of coal right now is an issue - likely to ease in the spring, but it's at least three times as much per tonne as pre-Russia.
  9. Jamie is correct - impressive sized ships for a frigate class (nearly a destroyer). Canada is purchasing a design based on the Type 26 to be constructed in Halifax, Nova Scotia. You'll have to come over for some ship and train spotting! Echo the lovely photos comment. If you like ships they'll be building the type 31 in Rosyth, and they also have some old submarines docked there. Your photos of the Firth of Forth reminded me.
  10. Went there this summer - thought it was a great line. However, like you we had problems with the tickets. We decided to buy in person as we weren't sure on how long our travel would be to get there. Their online booking system was down and so they refused to sell us tickets. We offered to pay, in numerous ways, eg. upfront, at the terminus station, you name it - but they refused to take a credit card without their online ticket booking. So there was a lineup of more agitated people who weren't being allowed to buy tickets. We could see the train was 80% empty, and would be at least 50% empty, so it was very frustrating. Risked spoiling what was a great morning for us. I wish we'd had the River Irt like you did - though I particularly enjoyed watching them turn William Beck. Won't let me attach an MP4 unfortunately.
  11. On distances - I had a panicked message from a family member last night, but Saskatchewan is 2500 miles away... Great Hobbies has stores in Oshawa and Ottawa. I was disappointed by their train selection when I went into their PEI one. However, if you have an interest in remote controlled, or plastic kits etc it might be interesting.
  12. Grab a steamwhistle beer from the old roundhouse in Toronto.
  13. That is not a solution that should be entertained. Look at where appeasement got us all in 1934, 1936 and 1938. Russia has carried out a chemical weapon attack on our soil. They have invaded another sovereign country in an effort to annex them and wipe out their culture. There is no scenario under which it should be okay to reverse the sanctions without Russia's withdrawal from Ukraine. If Russia's aggression is not checked, it's a false economy to save on gas bills this year while one watches half of eastern europe get picked off one by one (as if we're prepared to bend to Russia's will this time, what's to say NATO countries would stand behind article 5?). UK's corporate tax rate is 19% - so you would see a flatline increase in tax revenues against those profits. A windfall tax, or potentially a more progressive tax regime, you could see a sliding scale, where those making excessive/egregious profits would pay at a higher rate. Lots of way to measure that - for an example operating revenue / operating expensive gives you an operating profit margin. As long as you have built in the ability for firms to reinvest those earnings (rather than share buybacks etc) you could see an IRR calculation for a firm change on just pocketing billions (the cost of production hasn't changed, but what they can charge for it has), and so reducing the tax rate by investing in a renewables project would create future revenues. At the same time, those not reinvesting earnings, well, that's where the windfall tax returns it to government pocket to assist those that can not afford bills.
  14. I might be reading too much into signs that may or may not mean something… but it has stood out to me that some of the major box shifters have a lot of used inventory (a LOT!) and have started doing sweeping discounts. Rather than perhaps going through and reducing some skus based on age, or those they had a good margin on originally, they’re using quite blunt tools to shift stock. More so in used than new. I reckon we’re going to see some lean times in the hobby. I’d even have thought the APT-E would have sold out its second run, but “rule 1” only means so much when you’re looking at month of utilities. Think this could forbear a return to sales being concentrated in locos, rather than DMUs/EMUs etc. I did make an unexpected buy recently. Getting something for my father in here was a lovely Bachman J72 I got for sixteen quid. Couldn’t be happier with that!
  15. It’s not hyperbole - and you’re are absolutely correct to highlight nutrition and exercise as a major determinant of long term health outcomes. By forcing families to choose between food and heat we are going to be causing problems. We know exactly what impacts life expectancy and how it improved in the past, with a real life example in the US of when you ignore what’s needed. And when you look at the median income of a family, and the increase in energy prices, it’s not hyperbole on how many people this will impact. I can not find another two hundred quid a month, three hundred quid a month. My entire “discretionary spend” on things like my internet bill, my purchasing etc was just under 200 - and really we should be at the point that internet is not seen as discretionary. And I’m above median incomes (but locked in with higher outgoings, eg. Child support from divorce). We don’t need to rely on “personal experience”, we have statistics. A stagnation and now decline in real income unmatched since WWII. Hospital waiting lists are now about four times longer than they were in 2010. The UK’s capital spend on healthcare and education as a % of GDP is much lower than European neighbours. More Britons are paying out of pocket for healthcare than ever before (as a percentage of GDP). And I’ll say it once more. This is a 500% increase (ish). For a service/utility that is essential for the preservation and quality of human life.
  16. I do think you're discounting some of those on this thread with this statement though - those who are choosing what rooms to heat in their homes, scraping a few pounds here and there in monthly outgoings - and yet we're starting to see those energy "cap" forecasts come in. 300 quid a month, easily, for most people. The rate of increase is so high it's threatening to literally flip large portions of the UK not just into energy poverty, but also abject poverty. Health outcomes through your life are linked to things like having a warm, dry (no mould) home, and having good nutrition. We're dooming this entire generation of kids to short lives because there is not the will to do what is necessary to head off energy prices. The rest of it is painful - especially with how most prices have a component of energy (eg food), so inflation in energy trickles across so many goods and services. I reckon many on here could cope with a 10% increase on most of their bills, by trying hard to cut back, etc. But seeing a 500% rise in energy prices - there's no way to budget for that. No way to save your way out of it. Also wondering when the last time you tried to use the NHS was? Or the last time you went into a state school? The drop in capital spending over the last 10-12 years, exacerbated by COVID, have put so much of that "first world" infrastructure at risk. Don't worry though, am sure we can all go for a bracing swim the UK's coastal waters to shake off the doom and gloom. Oh... wait....
  17. Thanks for the photo Phil - and it looks like a gorgeous model
  18. Yep - newer roof and looks like newer windows (PVC double glazed in many rooms). However the walls and floors are pretty rotten and definitely out of true. It'd be a huge amount of work to set it all right - and you'd want to set up a wall cavity to insulate it, which will eat into that interior room. I was quite excited, then started looking through it... 300k for it in that shape is extremely hopeful.
  19. Peter's spares have lima replacement wheelsets - thread here
  20. TMC with an extra 10% off their sale using the code PAYDAY https://mailchi.mp/tmc-direct.com/hot-summer-extra-1177985 Some decent prices on newer stuff with that 10% off on top of their usual RRP discount. Nothing stands out to me, but if you were planning a purchase of something newer this might be the time to do it
  21. Ah - very cool! I go through Moncton once a week - and know that industrial park well. Let me know if you want any photos on the ground? When my parents visit we'll often drive around some of those streets as occasionally some good spotting over there, though it's getting harder and harder to see the Moncton yard. Interesting personal links for me - my Grandfather worked for Lord Beaverbrook at the start of WII - Ministry of Aircraft Production. He later joined the RAF and was sent to Canada under the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan - and he started in Moncton! Clicked through the blog links - all looking good, a very interesting project.
  22. I just feel really bad for all the modern image modelers who are desperately painting over their carefully weathered rails with white paint to stay true to prototype.
  23. I'm sorry I had not seen this thread until now. Fascinating subject - I live about 1km from where the HSWR used to run, it's now a walking and biking trail. I had thought about a shunting plank of a part of the industrial park just slightly closer to downtown Halifax - with an X is where I think he's modelling, and the O is where I had thought about doing a plank: So I am going to follow this thread with great interest. Living so close, can I help with any modern day photos? It's 3.5km to where you're modelling, good enough for a dog walk when it's cool or a quick bike ride out. There was a HSWR museum near Lunenburg, it closed "to relocate" a couple of years ago, but now all seems to have gone quiet and the facebook group disappeared. They had some amazing scenery modeled, and the chap was very knowledgeable on the railway. I'd suggest he was more interested once it had left Halifax, rather than the industrial spurs in Halifax... but I'm happy to try and find him and contact details for you if that'd be useful? If you're ever over in person let me know if you would like a coffee/beer. I'm glad you have fond memories. I moved to Halifax in 2016, and have been in Canada since 2009.
  24. Reading "Five Children and IT" to my kids at the moment - which has had a number of TV and film versions. I've not seen the 2014 film, the 90s TV version was good.
  25. They very much have moved to a model to do so for some of their range - but I think you're right for the steampunk range they were trying to make it widely available in general modelshops etc as opposed to be 90% sold out on preorder. However, two years without a further announcement, and retailers moving these in the 50% off bracket (no-one enjoys discounting that much - 20%-30% everyone can still feel like they made a good margin) might be concerning.
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