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298

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  1. Plenty more if the Carbarn here: https://www.loc.gov/resource/hhh.wa0200.photos?st=gallery
  2. You could model a genuine Niles Crane: https://www.loc.gov/pictures/resource/hhh.wa0200.photos.169724p/?co=hh AFAIK the Carbarn in Yakima was never wired, there is a knife switch on the wall and a long piece of cable called a "Stinger" that hooks onto the trolley pole to power cars.
  3. It's one of those where you wouldn't notice it until it was pointed out, then it might be a bit jarring. Furthermore, you'd have to chop up some of those Mountain Spew trucks so one had a back end on the front, so the reflection in the mirror would show another rear of a going away vehicle, and not the front. Am I overthinking this? Possibly...
  4. Something I did notice through the weekend was there weren't any hire vans in the car park, despite the presence of several large club layouts. Obviously this is an ongoing concern for both access to them and cost, but if this is the new future of exhibitions then we'll do just fine. There are also several videos of layouts at the show now appearing on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=cotgrave+model+railway&sp=EgIIAw%3D%3D
  5. It seems the great British public do fundamentally like foreign layouts, my US HO scale nighttime switching inglenook "Blue Heron" was voted favourite by the public at the Bingham MRC show at Cotgrave at the weekend. It was up against some credible opposition but seemed to pick up votes either because it was in a darkened room so the individual lights had more of an effect, or because it is mounted on an opticians instrument stand so can be adjusted in height remotely to suit all. I would explain the winning concepts but that would ruin the content of my forthcoming book "How to build a good exhibition layout and pick up lots of accolades without trying to sound like a complete narcissist".
  6. There was a list on here a few years ago...
  7. Day 1 of the South Notts show, TBH I wasn't exactly looking forward to it but the organisers remembered the brief and put the layout to the side of the stage in a darkens room. This seemed to make a massive difference to how the layout was perceived and there were lots of favourable comments and no failures that weren't caused by operator error on my part. Thanks to @doctor quinn for operating (and allowing me to go plane spotting) at lunch time, we'll be there tomorrow from 10 to 4.
  8. One Air's other 747, G-ONEE returning to the UK today after five weeks of maintenance in Victorville. Seen on finals for EMA from the car park of the South Notts show in Cotgrave. And it's fin is still red...
  9. I wonder if the original character from the first Moors TV series is still volunteering? The one who kept borrowing the speed gun and tried to book everyone doing 31mph... Or "That's 'elf and safety gone mad, yet again. People these days seem to have forgotten how to do things, unlike in my day when things got done. What's all this nonsense about door locks anyway, we didn't have door locks in my day..." (Edited quote from a family member). They seem to have forgotten that the rule book has been written in blood.
  10. I vaguely remember a show at Coventry Central Police Station in the late 1970s. I can't remember much about the layouts, apart from a large scale narrow gauge one with a coach that had fallen into a swamp. Then another show at Beduth' Civic Hall where a birthday present in the form of an Airfix Prairie was chosen (technically my third loco, although I'm not counting the abomination of a Lima LNER J50 when I wanted a Pannier). Later on I remember going to the combined hobby events in Digbeth halls in Birmingham.
  11. Blommer's is to close...: https://www.trains.com/trn/news-reviews/news-wire/news-photos-chocolate-factory-closure-further-reduces-downtown-chicago-rail-customers/?fbclid=IwAR0Rl3zUYnt59XCiUZNqrOf7KUuQB-vuEkRMYxTzdsgnZTVDee2-me1_XRU
  12. 298

    Formula 1 2024

    Just practice for Monaco where he'll be enjoying a leisurely Sunday drive in the slowest and widest car.
  13. ...or more accurate in the sense that he didn't predict and we haven't got a class 83 and 84. The 81 would have been covered by Lilliput and the 82 by Triang, and although the former was a good model, neither are to modern standards.
  14. Conversely, I've seen plenty of photos from OnTraxs of layouts that regardless of their size, are very much of a scene with a train in and not what you describe, but that is an example of subjective analysis Vs selective photos. I can see how they might take longer to build, be less interesting to operate and more difficult to transport, but it's something that has piqued my interest and am looking at for the future.
  15. Another order of custom decals turned around quickly by John from Precision Labels- I thought I'd messed up by not specifying double pass white as I must have done previously and they look quite thin on the backing sheet, but seem to have sufficient density when applied. I copied the font from a side photo of 965 in the Hershey archives, noting that it lacked the serifs on the lettering. As usual the S was the most difficult, but I found a similar font to manipulate: The lower car of the three is an incorrect Walthers 40' box, finished before I realised the dimensions and weights I copied from a builders photo pretty much pointed to all Hershey cars being 36', the Accurail inside and outside braced cars being closest in design (1049 is now relegated to test status as I have enough 36' cars). If I was smart enough I would have worked out exactly where the bracing went and adjusted the artwork to sit over it, instead of cutting it in position and painting over the gaps.
  16. Similarly, I've known of issues with solid state juicers requiring a minimum current (2a) that is higher than a Powercab with a wall-wart (1.8a).
  17. Something I never figured until I started modelling Cuba is I think (and please correct me if I'm wrong) is there is a certain resentment- for example, one friend described my purchase of a Rapido GMD-1 in Cuban Railways livery as a "Cuban Crisis" and I've heard the word "Communist" used in hushed terms... The actual era I'm trying to portray is pre-revolution when Cuba was a bit of a playground for the USA, think Hemingway and "Our Man in Havana" from that era and more recently the D-list sequel "Dirty Dancing-Havana Nights" which is actually as good at describing the pre-revolutionary years as "Who framed Roger Rabbit?" is about the demise of the Pacific Electric Interurban. I showed this photo of the Hershey to someone at the layouts debut and they were quick to point out the US Navy Sailor: https://www.worthpoint.com/worthopedia/original-slide-hershey-cuba-102-scene-2076329018 (link opens a slide listing on Worthpoint). I was hoping the layouts recent outing in front of knowledgeable US railfans in Stokenchurch might make them realise that it wasn't actually an American layout, despite fundamentally looking like one, but complacency still seems to reign and the Hershey didn't seem to be more recognised than at normal shows. I suppose that's the problem when you model something specific, by comparison is @TEAMYAKIMA's Chinese layout a specific industrial city or could it be anywhere?
  18. So plenty of new entrants to the hobby who haven't seen it then. I think it's only been out a two or three times in the last ten years or so, having been in store in a late member's garage. I believe the old (and occasionally smoking) Kebab van has been presented to his family, hence the new replacement kebab van: I'm shocked that you've found a smaller layout..
  19. Something that applies to all layouts, is they have to look visually inviting - I've realised now that some previous projects that fastidiously followed a prototype would have been boring to look at, whereas adding a little modellers licence would have given them an edge. It also helps to have proper running, the same train thoughtlessly batting round or running badly isn't going to appeal to me.
  20. ...managed to see it from home, through a gap in the clouds when it departed just after 16.00 This plane-spotting lark is really difficult - I thought railtours were bad for running late, but this was far worse. I'm not sure what was rare and what wasn't for Birmingham, although I thought this Virgin A350 G-VPRD might be? The pilot didn't know where to go and had to follow a ground vehicle...
  21. Finally, my own photo of OneAir's G-UNET, currently at Birmingham.
  22. Technically it isn't foreign, but it is an Interurban so ticks all the boxes for me. It was my favourite layout at Ely last year.
  23. One Air's G-UNET has just been on BigJetTV landing at Heathrow....
  24. I'd like to one day, I had a couple of sets of decals that I passed on to @Supaned and still have a Suydam brass B (that you've just reminded me to produce some decals for Central Limones for it before I finish the next white decals sheet).
  25. Statement on the AMB/Laserkit website regarding the closure of the business due to the passing of owner John Hitzeman. http://www.laserkit.com/ One of my first overseas purchases when I started US modelling was for the AMB detailing parts and lowering kit for the Cannonball Steeplecab, and I was very impressed with the final result that John created with his Fort Dodge loco.
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