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Middlesea John

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Posts posted by Middlesea John

  1. Ken was at the Hull MRS clubroom on Monday doing some last minute preparations for our annual show on11 and 12 November.  He seemed fine though we only said hello as he walked past our layout, Ladycross.  To say it's a shock to the society is a massive understatement.  As has already been noted, Ken was a very talented modeller who was always happy to share his knowledge and experience but was also a friend to so many.  He will be sorely missed not only in Hull but throughout the modelling world .  .

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  2. On 12/10/2023 at 18:17, sjp23480 said:

    I can supply you a complete assembly of the motor and wheels for a very reasonable sum plus postage - £10 in total.

     

    Just replace the existing mechanism and wire it up - its a few screws and a couple of solder joints to complete the installation.

     

    Steve

    Thanks - I'll have a think about this.  I know I couldn't do it myself but I know a man who ... er ... might.  Thanks again.

  3. I have a number (probably too many) Hornby Bulleid pacifics.  I attach the brake rodding because they just look wrong without it and the crew and headcode discs but not the underneath stuff.  I don't understand why Hornby don't factory fit the brake rods because they're horrendous to fit.  I actually emailed them about what glue to use and a guy from customer services rang me to say Hornby use the superglue you get 3 for £1 from Poundland.    

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  4. I have "done up" one of these old Tri-ang coaches.  Apart from the wheels, the main thing for me was that it is not a composite.  The window spacing and number of compartments suggests first class so I have made it into an old first class coach downgraded to second class which I found a photo of in a train at East Grinstead but now can't find ! Flushglaze helps too, along with amended roof detail - rainstrips and correctly placed vents.

    I managed to break one of the bogies when I was replacing the wheels so I have modified both bogies to look a bit like (as opposed to being a proper model so to speak) those found on an old SECR coach.  I've since broken them again  as you can maybe see in the photo.

     

    Ex Tri-ang suburban coach.jpg

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  5. Thanks everyone for the thread and the input to it.  We have a 10-car set on Ladycross that masquerades as the Bournemouth Belle.  Not all the correct  Pullmans we know but it suffices - and it derails regularly.  My Hull MRS friend/colleague Adrian owns most of these and has had so many goes and changing/altering/adjusting/hitting with a hammer the couplings that it's almost driven him bonkers. We've also relaid some of the track to try and help !  Finally at the Hull show this month it seemed to work OK but what a pain.  If nothing else it's good to know it's not just us !

  6. It rather upsets me to read that because I don't possess certain skills and don't have the time/inclination/wherewithal or whatever to learn them that I may be considered not to be a modeller.

    There is a very easy way to get over this - though I appreciate it's not within everyone's grasp - and that  is to join a club.  Were were only talking last night at Hull MRS about the sharing of skills.  A new person came to visit and see what we were doing , hopefully with a view to joining.  One of our group was relaying some track, two were rewiring some of the electrics and I was doing some touching up of the scenery.  Of the others, we demonstrated how one has done the lighting, one is working on point rodding in the scenic area, one made the trees and one has gone through every item of rolling stock checking the wheels and replacing where necessary.  We are all modellers, we pool our skills to make a better layout than any one of us may have built. 

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  7. Much as I love my trains to be as accurate as possible, like a couple of people above, I do enjoy a bit of tinkering with coaches.  So I took an old Tri-ang Pullman (Anne, Jane, Mary or Ruth- who knows) and cut a bit out of one side then turned that round so the window positions were reversed.  I then filled in what I believed to be the correct windows, painted it green and fitted flush glazing.  It looks a bit like the Pullman that was used on the last train on the Kent and East Sussex which was quite well photographed though mainly the Pullman was in the background.  It does OK in a Summer Saturday extra to Bournemouth on our Hull MRS layout, Ladycross.

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  8. 20 hours ago, The Johnster said:

    They look ok as formal ornamental garden trees, which to be fair is what they are intended to be, but might have a role as background as Ray suggests, or be the basis for working up into more realistic tree with added foliage, cuts into the profile, or flock powders to roughen and 'naturalise' the outlines.   They might be a cheap source of cut off bits of foliage as well; good spot, Ray!

     

    While you're in Poundland, check out the cheapnasty childrens' paint brush sets with stiff nylon bristles.  They are hopeless as paint brushes, but a set will provide a lifetime's provision for sweeping out crud from flangeways and similar layout housekeeping.  I am also a fan of Pound Shop superglue, which holds things together well enough but can be easily snapped apart should the need arise, a perfectly cromulent method of attaching loco bodies to chassis blocks when you have lost one of the silly little screws or are fitting a chassis not originally intended (Bachmann 57xx mech under Hornby 2721, for example).  Proper superglue can then be reserved for proper superglue jobs where some permanence is needed.  Acrylic paints in tubes for watering down are useful as well, though colours tend to be a bit primary.  And the strings of led garden or party battery lights are good for internal building lighting; mine have been cut off from the battery boxes and are powered by a 3v mains psu.  You can get similar solar powered strings from Aldi/Lidl.

     

     

     

  9. I've put Flushglaze in quite a few green Lima Mark1s and, with one noticeable exception, they look IMHO  really good.  The exception is the Buffet Restaurant Car.  It is a vast improvement but it's nowhere near as good as the Replica Model of the same coach.  One side is better than the other though, the 2 small windows on one side still look far too small so I try to position it that the audience/spectators/crowd/congregation only see the other side. 

  10. Hi everyone, a bit of help please.  I'm looking at freight trains for Hull MRS's layout Ladycross. Was either Portland or Purbeck stone or both carried by rail in the early 1960s ?  If so what kind of wagons and, equally important what did h loads look like ?  Large rocks, Small pieces, Square, symmetrical, random shapes & sizes.

    Oh and did it go along the Bournemouth to Southampton route ?  

    Many thanks

    John

  11. I have one that's been seen on Hull MRS's Ladycross. I made it years ago from one of the old Tri-ang Pullmans.  I carved about 2" out of one side and reversed it (quite usefully the sides are flat without a tumblehome) then filled in some of the windows, flushglazed the rest, painted it green and gave it some Hornby Gresley Bogies.  I took my inspiration from a handful of photos I found so, dimensionally I don't know but it looks the part.  The photos showed plain sides, not matchboard. Maybe they are poor photos but it does me.  Rule 1 applies. 

    Sorry I don't have a photo, it's at the clubroom and we're not allowed in.  

  12. On 12/12/2020 at 17:41, Mallard60022 said:

    Yup, I have discovered that, however John has his informants and circa 1960 SR in the south is a good excuse to use them, either for meat or other perishables, maybe fruit or veg.

    For Seaton Junction I am lucky to have plenty of 'evidence' of a mix of Containers and Vans and there was at least one dedicated train of meat from Bideford I think it was that went to London on weekdays. Empties

     was an Express fully fitted goods of 40+ vans, and Nine Elms Merchant Navy worked, overnight on the down.

    John will have to be selective as Ladycross is a Club Exhibition Layout. I can do what I like, within reason :dancer:Phil

    Sorry guys not been here for a few days. Thanks for taking my place Phil !  Ladycross is set in the New Forest (ie the Bournemouth Main Line) in 1962.  We have an excuse for various farming and agricultural stock though to be fair there wasn't much freight on a Saturday in August.  I'd like to have them in a pick up freight or similar but don't want it to look silly.  

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