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MrWolf

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Posts posted by MrWolf

  1. I do enjoy the regular postings from Dewchurch, it's good to know that the Beeching axe hasn't fallen yet, even though I don't often get time to comment, keep them coming, they're always inspiring and entertaining.

     

    Rob 

    • Like 2
    • Agree 7
  2. 5 hours ago, John Besley said:

     

    Without the instructions as we know how things go together, us blokes don't read them.... that way they'll be enough bits left over for another crate and shed door

     

    I'm suffering from the after effects of that at present.

    I have two motorcycles of the same make and model, manufactured only two years apart which were dismantled forty five years ago by someone who started to "restore" them.

     

    Naturally, there's bits everywhere...

     

    I've spent hours measuring, trial fitting, reading old manuals, parts books and factory bulletins as well as trawling the internet and bothering those in the know whilst untangling everything.

     

    It's been emotional!

    • Friendly/supportive 15
  3. The DVLA seems to have not been all that concerned in the past with Isle of Man registered cars that had been sold off to the mainland. My school metalwork teacher had an ancient Triumph Herald 1200  estate on an IOM plate, displaying a K registration when the last sold here were on a J. (IIRC the island began the letter series a year before us.) It still wore its MAN plate in the late 1980s.

    • Like 2
  4. I suspect that is more to do with the current style of registration number being rather non memorable rather than your memory breaking down. 

    I remember the registration number of the old bangers my father owned, (Hillman Minx 9080RE, Vauxhall Viva JJV205F, Hillman Avenger NJF750M, Vauxhall Cavalier YVS692S, but once they started putting letters at the front, I was lost. 

    • Agree 2
    • Interesting/Thought-provoking 1
  5. 21 hours ago, Andy Keane said:

    I have now made up the stink pipe for Station Road and also the shunting klaxon for the yard. They both have 1mm steel rods up the middle for strength and to plant them and for the stink pipe a bit of thick walled 2mm tube around the steel to bring it up to the correct 6" scale diameter.

    The next question is what colours to paint them. I guess the klaxon post and box could be white like a loading gauge or stone like the buildings but its hard to know. The stink pipe would have belonged to the local authority so I guess it could be white, black, coloured, etc - all thoughts most welcome.

    20240413_110159.jpg.6d062e9ea13b744013f8266fd24d1949.jpg20240413_110306.jpg.14da7282cbb72170bd2119abc94bb1c3.jpg

    20240413_110130.jpg.8448fafb4f159e8ba5ad818100267af6.jpg

     

    You've made a great job of some more of those ordinary items that are seldom if ever modelled.

     

    The stink pipes were generally painted mid green or a bluish green to blend in with their surroundings.

    • Agree 1
  6. 7 hours ago, Mikkel said:

     

    What a lovely photo. And a rare good shot of a round-ended 3- planker with lefthand GWR!

     

    It's interesting to see the large oil lamp on the corner of the building too. In the later photo it has disappeared and there's a row of gas lamps beneath the canopy.

    • Like 1
  7. 15 hours ago, franciswilliamwebb said:

     

    Shepherd’s yawning? 😇

     

    It occurred to me that the shepherd may have been awake all night worrying sheep.

    😜

     

    • Informative/Useful 1
    • Funny 3
    • Friendly/supportive 1
  8. I've had fun and games trying to attach fishing line to the Ratio / Peco posts, it seems to not like any type of glue.

     

    I've gone with extremely fine copper winding wire and when I can get back to the layout for a few hours I'll post up the results. 

     

    Otherwise I'll be drilling six holes in over three hundred posts.....🤪

    • Friendly/supportive 1
  9. 1 hour ago, Enterprisingwestern said:

     

    I assume Little Red Riding Hood is aware of what she is living with?!!

    Damned good idea though.

     

    Mike.

     

    That might be the other way around, she may or may not have been the silent killer I was referring to...

     

    03000f5d.jpg.49a733cac63ce1844ca350f599576a5b.jpg

    • Like 2
    • Funny 2
  10. 9 hours ago, alastairq said:

    Rivarossi used to make a B&O Dockside switcher....and used the same mech for a tender version[with a slope back tender].

    They had full valve gear, so may be worth keeping an eye out for?

    Their motors were huge, and could threaten the integrity of the National Grid when pulling a long train.

    But.....if non-working, could be a good source of parts for a Varney?

    [As well as having a nice plastic bodyshell]

     

    I had one of those Rivarossi locos, mint, boxed and seemingly unused, it came in with some other railway odds and ends to a friend's antique shop. 

    After a check over and a little oil, it ran beautifully on code 100 track.

    It went back to Italy via eBay for £30+ post as Swindon never had one. 

    It would make an interesting and powerful loco and they do turn up fairly often.

    I think that the motor would probably run my 6" Colchester lathe.

    • Like 2
    • Funny 1
  11. 1 minute ago, PhilJ W said:

    If you don't touch the scrotes you won't be in trouble, just give them a fright. By starting up the chain saw and asking them if thats what they are looking for.😈

     

    That would be classed as threats to kill, putting them in fear of harm, use of an offensive weapon and in holding them at sawpoint, unlawful imprisonment.

     

    A better idea would have been to have said nothing to the police, armed ourselves with something silent, a couple of rolls of chicken wire and the keys to another friend's fishing boat. ☠️

    • Like 5
    • Agree 1
  12. 11 hours ago, KeithMacdonald said:

     

    We'd be laughing and sneering at them as examples of a backward-looking country in decline, stuck in a time warp, unable or unwilling to learn. Oh wait ...

     

    My inner cynic would suggest that we, the British are not backward looking, the vast majority aren't looking at all, except at what is handed to them.

    The politicians, academics and oligarchs like that just fine, a compliant, fearful and servile people.

     

     

     

    • Agree 1
  13. 5 hours ago, johnofwessex said:

     

    Has it been reported?

     

    What would be the point of that? If you could even get a drugs marker put on the car, chances are all they'd get is a cannabis warning, or if charged with DUI and banned (if indeed the f'tards have ever held a license) they'll just buy another junker and drive it around until they get pulled again. 

    The most likely result in court is being bound over or maybe a suspended sentence.

     

    If you think the police are indifferent to such behaviour, it's largely the fault of the utterly inept justice system.

     

    Last year I was helping a friend clear some land behind another friend's house which was so overgrown you could only see one of the three garages on site.

    We'd replaced the lock on the brick garage to store our tools, but after just four days someone crowbarred the door and stole two Stihl petrol brush cutters and a chainsaw.

    I called 999 to be told that unless the burglary was in progress I should call 101.

    An hour later, I got through and was asked if the burglary was in the house? 

    No. The garage.

    Is the garage attached to the house?

    No.

    Then we can't attend.

     

    About an hour later we were hacking into the creepers at the back of the next garage and found the items in bin liners hidden between the garages under a large ivy plant.

    Obviously the thieves were intending on coming back with transport and probably had loot from other outbuildings.

     

    I called 101 again to fill them in on what we'd found and ask if they would like to catch the culprits as there had been a spate of burglaries, all they would need to do is keep watch.

     

    The answer, as you might have guessed by now was no.

     

    So I offered to assist, what if four ex military types secreted themselves nearby that night?

     

    I was then sternly told that it would be we who would be in trouble with the law.

     

    Exasperated, I suggested that the desk jockey should prepare for mayhem and hung up.

     

    We took all our tools home and decided that breaking and entering for the purposes of theft must now be legal, but we missed the press release.

    • Friendly/supportive 9
  14. 2 hours ago, Winslow Boy said:

    More like a twelve bore to the panniers.

     

    To paraphrase Blazing Saddles:

     

    "Don't shoot 'im, you'll just make 'im mad!..."

    • Funny 3
  15. Likewise, I learned to ride (ish!) when I was twelve, around the school grounds on a knackered orange Vespa Ciao, about as uncool as you can get, followed by various scrap Honda Cubs around the local fields.

    First road bike was a Puch Sports 50, bought from someone who had dismantled the engine and bu66ered it up.

    I followed that with a CB100N, (Are there any left?) CG125, a rigid Francis Barnett in trials trim, a 350 "upright" Panther, (Forks modified with Triumph springs and I don't recall seeing another 350.) and the first big bike was a 1960 BSA A10 caff racer with 1958 Rocket engine, a "proper" greaser's bike at last. 😆

    • Like 1
  16. Exactly like that! I can't remember if it was that model or more likely an even older B2 that he bought from a fellow apprentice who was heading back to Wales and whose mother would have had a fit if he turned up on a motorcycle, but another tale was of getting the bike running.

    Father had just returned from a test drive and was making some adjustments when a passer by told him that he had an identical bike in his back garden he'd been meaning to give the scrap man and he was welcome to it.

     

    As for butchers getting near motorcycles, it seems far from uncommon. Whoever last worked on the 1953 C11 evidently only possessed an adjustable spanner, a hammer and a chisel.

    Even the little slotted screw securing the distributor clamp to the crank case has been chiselled to death.

    I'm replacing the damaged fasteners with better used ones from my stash, even though I'm thinking of moving this one on.

    • Like 3
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