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George Hudson

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Posts posted by George Hudson

  1. Great, thanks for the tips.  

    I should have known it would be a variant of "switch it off and on again". :-)

     

    Strange how this digital stuff should be a mystery at times.  I still have a decoder which stubbornly refuses to be readdressed from 03.  I did two locos, one after the other on the programming track; one worked and the other didn't even though I did the same procedure, got the same noises etc... what do I know, I'm only following instructions.

  2. Sorry for the clickbait title but couldn't find my problem wading through the forum.

     

    Actually the title says it all!

     

    One of my Hornby locos with Hornby decoder was going along merrily under control through gauge master but I caused a short on the track and the loco which had just stopped shot off for an impromptu 30cm drive then stopped.

    Now I find that this loco will start fine but turning the speed down to zero results in the speed dropping very slowly and comes to a halt 5-10 seconds after instruction depending on speed.  The emergency stop button on the controller still works fine in bringing the engine to an immediate stop.

     

    Any ideas before I simply put in a new chip and write it off to experience?

     

    Thanks in advance

    Andrew

  3. So following the burial ground I was looking for something low and typical.  Of course a market! I bought a couple of ready made stalls (Wills?) and although they are good kits for sure, they didn't have the scruffiness that I was looking for.  Knocked up an extra 8 therefore from scraps and white metal wheels.  Also produced a tea caravan from scrap plastic.  Again looks authenticly like it could poison you if you bought a sausage roll there!  I am still filling up the stalls but here's the work in progress.

    market_1.jpg

    market_2.jpg

    market 3.jpg

    shoe stall.jpg

    • Like 14
  4. On 08/06/2020 at 20:16, Spam Can Man said:

    Very impressed with the arches. It is very tricky trying to reproduce rows of arches and also quite tedious! Our solution with Crystal Palace High Level was to make one master arch out of a combination of Perspex and plasticard, from this we made a silicone rubber mould and then cast them out of polyurethane resin (all 70 of them!) It was then a case of joining them together with epoxy adhesive and then hide the gaps with brick embossed plasticard, then finally paint and weather them. I must admit, I would not want to do it again!

    crystal arches.gif

    crystal arches 3.gif

    crystal arches 2.gif

    That looks excellent, very crisp and good proportions!

    • Agree 1
  5. On 10/06/2020 at 09:58, Cornholio said:

    @George Hudson I have a question about your window making technique.

     

    Do you make the fine glazing bars by scoring the plastic, then rubbing white paint into the groove?

     

    I can't fathom how else you get such fine sharp lines.

     

    Thanks in advance.

     

    Andrew

    Hi, yes you guessed correctly.  

    That's exactly how I do it and the rest of the woodwork is achieved following "Stubby's" method, which I learnt on this forum, of using sticky lables.  The labels have a drawing of the window on them and you cut away and peel off the lable where the panes of glass are positioned.  

    If the window frames are coloured then you can paint them and buff up the panes whilst wet.  This will spread the paint into any scratched-in glazing bars and edges of the lable.  Don't be too rough and use cotton buds.

    Regards

    Andrew

     

    I think I show this in detail in my Aldersgate layout thread, quite where I don't know.  It's bee going for a decade or so!!

    • Thanks 1
  6. After many hours on the NatWest Bank (Aldersgate buildings 11), I needed something more in my comfort zone.  To fill the gap between Booth's Distillery and the Flying Horse pub (no I don't expect anyone to know what I am talking about but I will add pictures later!), I am using a building which still stands and seemed to have been a wholesaler of peanuts opposite Spitalfields market.  Following redevelopment it's now the English Restaurant.  It's quite smart and I've dined there several times over the recent years and is probably in marked contrast to Dino's cafe which was next door in the 1950s!

     

    Here are photos of the original and current sites of the prototype.  I am changing the colour of the woodwork from green to BR maroon because it will be near the Flying Horse which is already green.  I think the BR maroon is also a good 50s colour.  As can also been seen, the model is more "inspired by" rather than a direct copy.  Dino's cafe for instance has been move to the right from the left of the building.

     

    Thanks for your interest 

    Andrew

    1970.jpg

    2020 rest.jpg

    drawing.jpg

    stage 1.jpg

    • Like 6
    • Craftsmanship/clever 1
  7. Hi,

     

    I'm not much of an interiors person, yours are good, very atmospheric.  

     

    I've posted a lot on here of my scratchbuilding work on my Aldersgate layout which is a part of a "might have been" GER terminus in 1956/7.  If you search on Aldersgate in this forum I have detailed the builds somewhat.  You might find some ideas there.  I use almost exclusively Scalescenes but also rate superquick and if you can get any old Bilteazy (sp?) kits to chop about they're also good (have a look at my Stratham gallery which is a 2mm layout).

     

    As Col. Stephens above, I would also go for mounting board (best value at "The Range").

     

    Good luck and I look forward to seeing more posts.

     

    Andrew

  8. 34 minutes ago, Scrapman said:

    Andrew

     

    Your picture of the Port of London building is not near Spitalfields Market but is actually in Charterhouse Street, opposite Smithfield Market, about a mile away close to Farringdon Station

     

    Ray

    yes quite right, mistype by me

     

  9. On 10/05/2020 at 19:19, TJ52 said:

    Great modelling. Really enjoyed it. However, it's only right at the end we see any evidence of a railway.  Is this just an urban  diorama rather than a model railway? ?

     

    Not a criticism although it may seem like it!

     

    All the best 

     

    Terry

    Thanks for the comment.  Yes that's right, it's sort of morphed into a diorama and with hindsight I would have even less railway.  These tracks are a legacy from a larger layout begun many years ago (and in another country!).  I am not a great engineer and there always seem to be niggling problems that spoil my enjoyment of operating, I guess that's one of the main reasons people join club; to share skills.

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