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Mark Forrest

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Posts posted by Mark Forrest

  1. 52 minutes ago, Coldgunner said:

    I'm not a big fan of cyclists (also not a fan of bad driving either), but will be interesting to see the other perspective.

    Give it a couple of weeks and you'll be riding through red traffic lights and pulling wheelies on pavements just like the rest of us. 

     

    • Funny 3
  2. A busy couple of days at work hasn't left much time or energy for working on the layout, although I'm pleased with how the paint on the backscene has turned out.  To be fair, after working on it all over the Easter weekend, I was ready for a bit of a break from it anyway.

     

    Rather than anything productive, here's another posed photo of how it might look when it's finished.

    IMG_20230412_210725.jpg.790b2baf3bb42a3c8eaab53b0a093820.jpg

     

    • Like 18
    • Craftsmanship/clever 1
  3. I use similar trestles myself.  Their lack of adjustment to cope with uneven floors can be a bit of an issue.  I tend to add packing between the board and the top bar of the trestle to get things level.  Doing it this way means you can keep an eye on a spirit level placed on the top of the baseboard more easily than packing under the feet of the trestle.

     

    That said, I'd just use two restless under the centre board and one at each end of the other boards, which frees up some floor space beneath the layout.

     

    You've just reminded me; I intend to remove the chains that hold the height adjustment pins on my trestles - they make too much noise when in the back of a car or van on the way to an exhibition!

    • Like 1
  4. On 10/04/2023 at 21:18, wagonbasher said:

    Looking great with only a couple of weeks to go.  You haven’t started the fiddle yard yet have you.  No point getting ahead of yourself?

     

    Andy

    Can't rush these things, plenty of time to build a fiddle yard 

    • Agree 1
  5. A much less productive day today with some time spent tidying up the mess I've created around the layout.

    One important job ticked off the list though, the road crossing.

    Like most of the plain track on the layout, the rear siding uses Exactoscale Fast track track bases.  Had I planned to have a road crossing here, I might have used something else for this section but this will do for now (longer term, there might be another turnout added somewhere around here).

    IMG_20230410_184119.jpg.721edd6a1cc2c5f1143db951044a919c.jpg

    I sliced as much of the chairs off as I dared, then added a framework made from some Evergreen strip.

    IMG_20230410_184138.jpg.55faaceed4367806fd88226f16697eee.jpg

    I then added some planks (more Evergreen) on top of the frame.  Not perfect, but it will do for now.

    • Like 19
  6. More painting this evening.

    I'm sure, somewhere, I have the tin of paint that I used for the sky on the original layout.  Obviously now I need it, I can't find it anywhere, so the whole layout is getting a fresh coat of sky grey ("Brooklyn" from B&Q).

    IMG_20230409_205800.jpg.4f47e6802e84887e9ed088ca410feff2.jpg

     

    While I have the board on its back, there a short section of track that needed a dropper adding and there is an uncoupling magnet that needs attention.

    • Like 8
    • Informative/Useful 1
  7. More progress with the layout fascia today.  Firstly, cutting a strip of hardboard to tidy up the bottom of the boards.

    IMG_20230409_192037.jpg.ffa68b3a84f987e187fdb15c5fffc640.jpg

     

    Then more painting...

    IMG20230409175554.jpg.754bd2a5636c9a93768d0947fd5a63ea.jpg

     

    I'd forgotten just how time consuming this stage of getting a layout ready is; but I do think it's worthwhile.

    • Like 12
  8. 50 minutes ago, Whetstone Bridge said:

    I’ve seen another thread mention foamcore board as a lightweight option.  Could go wider with the baseboard then.

    Be careful if the baseboard is deeper than the brackets.  Leaning on the front edge of the baseboard could see it topple over and end up on the floor!  While foam board can work, I believe there is an argument for having a reasonably amount of weight in the board to help counterbalance any overhang.

    • Like 5
  9. I use a Tam Valley juicer on Fryers Lane.  On the whole it works very well, with no obvious pause or hesitation when the polarity switches.

    One issue I do have, which I've mentioned in topics here before is a tendency for a spark from the rail when the wheel bridges the gap to the frog.

    Nobody else I've spoken has noticed this, so I do wonder if it's something peculiar about my layout which uses steel rail and a (now ancient) Roco Multimaus.  I gather the Multimaus has a reputation for putting out a slightly higher voltage than some other systems, so that might be a factor.

    Based on my experience, I probably wouldn't use a juicer again.  At some point (excuse the pun) I'll replace the frog juicer with microswitches switched by the servos that throw the tie bars to eradicate the spark.

    • Friendly/supportive 2
  10. 10 hours ago, 2ManySpams said:

    Are you still having the disco lights? Loved them.

    It looks like they do sunrise and sunset, but sadly no disco mode on these ones.

    IMG20230408173921.jpg.0a8069ffa8839fd44e5508dee55c2d44.jpg

     

    They are, however, adjustable from warm white to cool white.  With the old setup I had separate strips of warm and cool LEDs, this appears to no longer be necessary.

    • Like 3
    • Informative/Useful 1
    • Interesting/Thought-provoking 2
  11. I made the most of the nice weather today by making the lighting beam for the layout.  Luckily, I had a couple of strips of ply in the garage that did the job.

    IMG_20230407_161649.jpg.1f459977dbf00834e563aeec7b6178a6.jpg

    Having the luxury of a van to shift the layout in meant I could make the beam in one piece rather than having a join in the middle.

    As the layout is now longer, I've raised the front fascia slightly, but ensured that it still hides the top edge of the backscene from normal viewing distance.

    • Like 17
  12. 19 hours ago, simonmcp said:

    Does anyone have details of the hotel with the fabulous breakfast? I may need at least one overnight stop to recover from all the excitement of the day, I will have my GTN spray with me for when the siren goes off so hopefully won't need CPR! And although I'm from Cornwall unfortunately I am gluten free so can't build my strength up with a pasty.

    The Great Western Hotel next to the station was where Spams and I stayed last year (and are again this year).  A little more spendy than some other options, but a very nice hotel with an excellent brekkie.

    https://thegreatwesternhotel.org/

     

    • Thanks 1
  13. The plan is that this extended version of Fryers will occupy the wall adjacent to my modelling workbench, so providing a convenient test track and somewhere to take photos of my latest projects.  With that in mind, I'm quite pleased with how this view is working out.

    IMG_20230402_213620.jpg.82e28ac4f7d0ed7ae89738319cd421e3.jpg

     

    In time, there may be an alternative building that could swap places with this one.

    • Like 12
    • Craftsmanship/clever 1
  14. 58 minutes ago, Nickey Line said:

     

    And all to yourselves by the look of it!

    Yes, it was surprisingly quiet, only place that was remotely busy was the car park off Walna Scar Road which was packed!

    • Like 1
  15. Up to the Lakes for a ride yesterday for a nice longish XC loop starting out from Grizedale and circumnavigating Coniston Water.

    From High Cross car park (nr Hawkshead) up towards the trail centre at Grizedale, but instead of heading into the forest, down to Parkamoor and through Blawit. Up onto Woodland Fell, then down into Torver then back up again past Scarr Head to reach Walna Scar road for the descent down into Coniston.

    A bit of quiet road lead to the bridleway from High Tilberthwaite, past the disused quarries, High Oxon Fell, Iron Keld and down to Knipe Fold. Got to be honest, I didn't have much left in my legs for the last climb on the road up Hawkshead Hill and was relieved to see the entrance to the car park.

    IMG20230403102856.jpg.3e72fdc55517dcada37572899ce376b9.jpg

    IMG-20230403-WA0000.jpg.a86643199a1d10a58a0768e6da8168ba.jpg

    Main reason for heading up that way was that Mrs F had sold a bike frame to someone in Preston and it was easier to drop it off than send as a parcel.  We got really lucky with the weather, perfect conditions and couldn't have asked for a better day for it. The route was great, nothing very technical but a decent amount of climbing and some amazing views, 3900' in 26.5 miles.IMG-20230403-WA0005.jpg.aad32c0f8498a7113753048f8b5b7754.jpgIMG-20230403-WA0015.jpg.916c60849e07685210258f5e34cdf677.jpg

    • Like 8
  16. The trip to Statfold yesterday reminded me that in a moment of recent weakness I gave in to temptation and bought a diesel brake tender.  I'm not sure why really, I can't see that the traffic on Fryers (or any future layout I have in my mind) would justify one, rule 1 and all that.

     

    Anyway,  I took it out of its box, gave it a quick look over and put it to one side while I focused on more important things.  Last night, I swapped the bogies over to a pair of Brassmasters compensated bogies that I put together a few years ago for something else.

    IMG_20230402_083606.jpg.d6ddd53507816f8e8bcedd9ef34b3d04.jpg

     

    It's sitting a little low and needs a spacer to set the ride height.  Cosmetic bogie sides ordered last night.  Nice little distraction.  Think it would probably benefit from some new buffers.

     

    • Like 15
  17. 23 hours ago, Enterprisingwestern said:

     

    A man after my own heart, that's my method on Wibdenshaw, but it can cause happiness and heartache in equal measures!

     

    Mike.

    Yes, so far it's working reasonably well here. I'm following your progress with Wibdenshaw over on EM 70s, it's coming along nicely.

     

    It's funny, without the deadline of an exhibition I do nothing; with a deadline I have a tendency to turn the hobby into a chore.  With the layout appearing at the SWAG member's day (3 weeks today), I seem to have found a nice balance of wanting to get the layout done to a reasonable standard, but not feeling too much pressure to get it 100% finished. That seems to be making the whole process a bit more enjoyable.

    • Like 1
    • Friendly/supportive 1
  18. I suspect you’ll get many different answers to this, but for me there are three things that come to mind when I think about what makes a good exhibition layout, those are:

    1. A consistent approach to detail across the whole layout and stock
    2. Presentation - well lit, near eye level, high back scene
    3. Reliable and realistic operation 

    Whether it’s worth planning to exhibit is very much a matter of personal choice.  If at the planning stage, it’s certainly worth making allowance for the layout being transportable.  Exhibiting is time consuming and adds some degree of pressure and deadlines to the hobby.  It can sometimes require a bit of a thick skin, as inevitably you’ll find some critics amongst the punters viewing the layout.  On the flip side, it can be a hugely satisfying experience and a great way to socialise with like minded people.  Exhibition deadlines can provide the impetus to get elements of the layout finished too.

    • Like 6
    • Agree 1
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