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wiggoforgold

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Posts posted by wiggoforgold

  1. One of the first locomotives built for Diddington was an Ivatt 2mt from a Comet kit. Then the Bachman one came along…. The kit built one is still with us, but was in need of a repaint, so here it is, outshopped as 46465 in plain black. DDA048C1-FA5E-41A1-AEFB-D4CCD7016BAE.jpeg.60a1a577975038c8fd54567f0e4a5525.jpeg1102AFDA-F07D-46CF-ACDF-28449354613A.jpeg.4dbaaaeb85a35d3ccab9af3c37c35b51.jpeg

    • Like 17
    • Craftsmanship/clever 1
  2. 25 minutes ago, Mikkel said:

    Looks great Alex. How are you finding the turntable, does it work well?

     

    Hi Mikkel

    I'm very pleased with the turntable. I haven't properly wired it up yet, as I'm going to wire it in to the board. It doesn't have any indexing, that has to be done by eye, but I'm using an old trainset controller on very slow speed, which allows me to line  it up.

    The model is actually for 3.5mm scale - it's a 65' one for Durango I think, but in my 4mm world it's a 50' one.

     

    Cheers

    Alex

     

    • Like 5
    • Thanks 1
  3. 1 hour ago, NHY 581 said:

    Love the Captain Kernow appreciation society bumper sticker !! 

     

     

    Which show are you off to, Alex  ? 

     

    Rob. 

     

     

     

    Not off to a show yet. It was just a test fit. It was a bit tight to get it all in last time, so I redesigned the legs and was making sure it all fitted, so there will be no nasty surprises when I'm going out. Next show booked reorganised Edington in July.

     

    • Informative/Useful 2
  4. Took a trip to the South Devon Railway at Buckfastleigh yesterday doing research for the milk train for Yelverton. We took a few pictures. Liz got the prize for the best one.


    Alex

    45F3D728-EF99-45F3-BD33-75A8CD6BC2FD.jpeg

    • Like 16
  5. Progress on the loco yard. The old shed has been removed, the holes filled with card, and the ground is being built up with Das. The new shed, modelled on Huntingdon East, is temporarily in place to check clearances. The old turntable pit has been removed, and a new section of baseboard cut from 6mm ply, left over from the original construction. The new, working, turntable is a laser cut kit from Kitwood Hill models.8C64370D-841D-4B7A-9B66-CED4C9765F0E.jpeg.8f51867d101052e8fd6e32337355ee3a.jpeg9B271D34-9590-4B89-9C82-FC0C037E3825.jpeg.65d9fa2f49ccc8890916e06a004c18b7.jpeg

    Alex

    • Like 17
    • Round of applause 2
  6. This weekend has been a busy one for Diddington. The new substructure for Diddington mark 2 has been completed.

    The old Diddington was never intended to be portable: however, it was made in sections to allow it to be moved from the garage where it was built, to the railway room. The fact that it could be dismantled in to sections allowed it to be taken to a couple of shows, though that was never the intention.

    Diddington mark 2 is unequivocally a permanent layout. The boards will be laid on a rigid substructure to  keep everything level. The removable legs of the original version have been done away with. The boards simply sit on the substructure, so that they can be easily moved around for construction and maintenance. There are adjusters at the foot of each leg, to allow for fine adjustment when the boards are in place. The spacings of the legs have been influenced by the need to store various items of musical equipment under the layout.

    The new substructure has been built off the wall of the railway room. The main component is a pair of longitundinal “L” girders, glued and screwed from 18X69 pse, which run the full length of the layout. The ends of the substructure are screwed and rawl plugged to the walls. The longitudinals are screwed inside the ends. Blocks were fitted to the L girders at strategic places, such as the ends, to provide a location for screwing the girders together. Care was taken at every step to make sure everything was square and level.

    The centre pair of legs are bolted to the layout, rather than screwed,  so that they can be removable to allow for items to be moved under the layout for storage.

     

     

    ECC6183F-C020-4498-9D65-8F8275092802.jpeg.a689a102772b1e19a5a539a22c0c8b3a.jpegA5D2B0A6-3694-4600-B801-093059EC5AAF.jpeg.b57de1caf73ed91238cf00e5c48e248c.jpeg

     

    2D1696A9-9B1B-4F97-BFA1-BA264D5EB6C5.jpeg.8e867f246c849a964f3c2302a73d977d.jpeg

    I need to complete the painting of the end wall of the railway room.  After that, completion of the new loco shed area, which is currently a scene of devastation as I had to forcibly remove the old turntable pit as a first step to installing a new, working one.

     

    Alex

     

    • Like 7
    • Craftsmanship/clever 3
    • Round of applause 2
  7. On 03/04/2022 at 22:48, Regularity said:

    Am I alone in misreading “Autosol” on first glance?

    Certainly wouldn’t be a good idea to use Autosol instead of a certain other cream intended for soothing purposes…

    (My late Uncle Baz once got up in the night because his piles were particularly uncomfortable, so he went to the bathroom to apply soothing lotion, but in the dark, didn’t realise that he had hold of a tube of toothpaste… Apparently you could hear the screams from some considerable distance!)

    Which reminds me of a cycling friend of my son who once confused embrocation for chamois cream and applied the emrocation where the chamois cream should go.

    • Friendly/supportive 2
  8.  I had four attempts at getting the notice right:

    1. Got accidentally stuck to the cutting mat.

    2. Trimmed the edge of he sign too close when cutting it out.

    3. Lost it. 

    Alex

    5E9738CF-42EA-4970-A40A-3F38F58164D9.jpeg

    • Like 16
    • Friendly/supportive 1
  9. 12 hours ago, Siberian Snooper said:

    Has Bickleigh station building been knocked down? It was still there the last time I drove a bus along there about 8 years ago.

     

     

    I think the building that is still there is the station master's house. There is a high wooden fence round the site which you can't see through. I was on a bike on the cycle path and couldn't see over the fence.

    Alex

    • Like 1
  10. 8D1F8272-463E-4985-82B6-CF021B3CFFC6.jpeg.f36d29682d52880a77e7e0886e5c9d6e.jpeg8D1F8272-463E-4985-82B6-CF021B3CFFC6.jpeg.f36d29682d52880a77e7e0886e5c9d6e.jpeg8D1F8272-463E-4985-82B6-CF021B3CFFC6.jpeg.f36d29682d52880a77e7e0886e5c9d6e.jpegToday I cycled the whole route of the line from Tavistock to Marsh Mills (except for the bit round Yelverton which is on private land). Sad that the stations, particularly Bickliegh and Horrabrige are no more and it has to be said Gem Bridge is a shadow of the former Walkham viaduct.

    This is the entrance to station road at Yelverton today.

    8D1F8272-463E-4985-82B6-CF021B3CFFC6.jpeg.f36d29682d52880a77e7e0886e5c9d6e.jpeg

     

    • Like 11
  11. 5 hours ago, Graham T said:

     

    Could I ask where you got the fern leaves from?

    They are from a company called "Model Scene" I found them by Googling "4mm scale ferns, which led me to a suitable supplier. A number of firms do them, and I,d use a different make next time simply for variety. They are laser cut from green paper.

    Alex

    • Informative/Useful 2
  12. 38 minutes ago, MrWolf said:

    Can I confuse matters further by reminding you of the AVRO Lincoln?

     

    Avro_Lincoln_ExCC.jpg.b1b8ec260469ee0803c53aad985afdec.jpg

    That looks like a very early Lincoln and are those actually Lancasters on the hard standing behind, with a Grumman Widgeon of all things in front of them? Look carefully at the early airfield scenes of "The Dambusters" and spot the Lincolns on the hardstanding in the background.

    • Like 1
    • Informative/Useful 1
  13.  

    The station would have been about 500 feet lower than the airfield, despite their proximity. The railway line can be seen in the bottom right of the first photo, running from South to North, with the Princetown branch curving off to the east, which allows you to see the position of the station. The line goes in to a tunnel which passes beneath the road just west of the roundabout. The church is more or less over the tunnel, and the spire was hit by a plane from RAF Harrowbeer during the war.

    Alex

    • Like 1
    • Agree 1
    • Informative/Useful 1
  14. 59 minutes ago, Gopher said:

    Hi Alex - if I could afford another Tamiya RC tank - the Abrams was top of my list. Well it was until I saw an advert in a model magazine for the new Tamiya 1/16th RC Centurion.   I think I'll have to stick with railway modelling for the moment given the cost of 

    I rather like the Centurion, but told the local club I was resisting it and waiting for a Churchill. :)

    • Like 1
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