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Re6/6

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Everything posted by Re6/6

  1. One would hope that the law will get him.
  2. Indeed, it was nice to have a play with Quai 87. Very reminiscent of enjoyable trips with it to The Netherlands. Something interesting to see that there is now new catenary, offset on one part of the layout across the canal and standard on many other tracks! Much thought is now needed when shunting!
  3. I should have said "CK's model of an elderly Midland 2F"!
  4. Love the 'rave from the grave' there CK!😺
  5. Balcombe team's visit to 'Dulverton' Yesterday CK, 10800, Brinkly and myself, the 'Balcombe' team, visited Ian Harrison's delightful 'Dulverton' P4 layout, set on the former Taunton to Barnstaple line. Ian very kindly asked us to bring 'stuff' along to drive around the layout. I took the opportunity to bring along the Raworth 'booster' loco to stretch its legs. I was very pleased with the smooth performance. It was mostly scratchbuilt around an old MTK bare brass wrapper. I will be predominantly be used on 'Balcombe' hauling one of the Newhaven boat trains. Also I brought along the green CL 25 to give it a proper spin away from the confines of just running in and out on 'Marsh Sidings'! CK's Cl 22 with some minerals from 'Marsh' and 'Fochriw' More to follow! Edited 5 minutes ago by Re6/6
  6. Yesterday CK, 10800, Brinkly and myself, the 'Balcombe' team, visited Ian Harrison's delightful 'Dulverton' P4 layout, set on the former Taunton to Barnstaple line. Ian very kindly asked us to bring 'stuff' along to drive around the layout. I took the opportunity to bring along the Raworth 'booster' loco to stretch its legs. I was very pleased with the smooth performance. It was mostly scratchbuilt around an old MTK bare brass wrapper. I will be predominantly be used on 'Balcombe' hauling one of the Newhaven boat trains. Also I brought along the green CL 25 to give it a proper spin away from the confines of just running in and out on 'Marsh Sidings'! CK's Cl 22 with some minerals from 'Marsh' and 'Fochriw' More to follow!
  7. I thoroughly enjoyed the France v Italy game. What an improvement in the Azzuri.
  8. 'Castle Combe' and the 'Tyling Branch' article was my inspiration to start 'proper' modelling. From RM April 1968
  9. Plane tree for St Martin-sur-orb. https://www.rmweb.co.uk/topic/150377-st-martin-sur-orb-h0-midi-layout/page/6/
  10. You could be right. All I know is that I get better results with the 'bespoke' glues than ordinary PVA. Don't know why!
  11. I tried to get one but they're 'no longer available' but show seven available on the original listing. All a bit odd!
  12. is thinking about 'Gunner', an old family friend on Holocaust Memorial Day. He was interned at Auschwitz III Monovitz and at the end he saw the horrors of Buchenwald.

     

    1. The Johnster

      The Johnster

      There are people in the world, mostly with a fairly predictable agenda, that are claiming that none of that ever happened.  Never forget; remembering is our only defence against it happening again, and it has, several times.

    2. Northmoor

      Northmoor

      Seconded.  I watched an excellent documentary a few years ago about the liberation of one of the work camps in Eastern Germany, by the US Army in 1945.  Seeing the elderly veterans - most of them around 90 - revisiting the area and choked up in recounting what they witnessed at the site.  One particular veteran stuck in my mind, his voice breaking with fury but the energy of man fifty years younger, at the people who said this didn't happen and he hadn't seen what he had.

    3. The Johnster

      The Johnster

      The Squeeze is Polish, and all Polish schoolchildren in her day, still under communism, were taken to Auchwitz.  She went when she was 14 and will never forget it. 

       

      The problem is that people who say it never happened are completly convinced of the conspiracy, and governments/government agencies in general but in the US in particular have not always behaved since WW2 in a way that has discouraged them.  The conspiracy theorists are never going to be persuaded otherwise, and while it isn't about this particular matter, we have seen in the US and Brazil that some of them are armed to the teeth and prepared to act on their delusional beliefs, manipulated by those of their ilk who have borrowed the group's collective brain cell and can exploit the foot soldiers for their own ends.  There's a massive untapped reservoir of racism, anti-semitism, envy of the more intelligent, and immigrant fear for these nutters to exploit.  Even if you showed them around the camps, they'd tell you you'd built them post-war as a sort of sick theme park.  Liberal democratic opinion is that the answer is education, and it is, but you can't educate pork, ultimately you can only slaughter it, which brings us all down to their level and is self-defeating. 

       

      I feel strongly about this and am greatly troubled by it.  I have mental health problems and would have most certainly have been for the gas chambers myself in that place and time, and memory of the horror is the only thing that keeps it from recurring, mostly (but there've been genocides and death camps since WW2).  The United Nations, a body whose general prinicples I have believed in all my life, is proving increasingly ineffective and it's main sponsor, the US, has effectively abandoned it.  Where do we go now?  Ok I'm gonna be brown bread soon and it doesn't affect me, but I don't want that sort of world; I have my principles, even as a burnt corpse!  Thinking it won't happen again because our systems are effective in preventing it sounds to me like the best possible way to ensure that it happens again.

       

  13. That's the last thing that you want on the slopes... ..hat, coat...🙄
  14. Going on a bit of a tangent, back in day when I was working at Totnes, we had a leading railman who was an ex-signalman from Brent Box who had a rather 'economical' attitude to the use of platform lighting. When he was on middle turn, passengers would be waiting under the dim light of two lamps and when the 'Cardiff' ran in at 1825 the remaining lights would be switched on 'plink..plink..plink' as it ran in and the he would extinguish the lights in the same manner during departure! When coming on duty at Brent Box it was said that he used to take coals out of the fire which had been banked up by the man on duty before him! One would think that he was paying for the electric and the coal. Dear old Jack, he was a character.
  15. ..at least there should be snow this time! 😺
  16. Would that be a Billinton design from 1894? Mike Sharman's wheel specification book lists a '3' (could be a missing print letter 'D'). If it is .....Driving 5'6" 18 spokes. Crankpins inline with spokes. Trailing 3' 0" 8 spokes. Hope that this might help.
  17. I bought my Jeep a couple of years ago now. The reasons for the purchase were firstly the comfortable height for an elderly bloke to get in and out of and secondly and more importantly (!) a spacious back compartment for layout transport. Every layout board that I now make will not exceed 145cms. 'Marsh Sidings' which is 5m x 0.5m will all fit inside.😺
  18. Indeed Paul the views were just the best....out to the sea, across to Dartmouth and up the river to BRNC!
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