Jump to content
 

mike morley

Members
  • Posts

    1,363
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by mike morley

  1. Since first asking the question I've discovered the Glyn Valley did indeed have a metal box in the guards van for conveying gunpowder.  As the GVT actually served a gunpowder factory I'd have expected the sheer volume of outgoing explosives would have made their need for a dedicated gunpowder van even greater.

  2. 53 minutes ago, melmoth said:

    The Welsh Highland was promoted as a tourist railway, and towards the end of its existence would presumably have had access to the Festiniog's stock.

    But in it's earlier guise of the North Wales Narrow Gauge Railway it quite definitely served several quarries.

     

    53 minutes ago, melmoth said:

    Not sure about the Corris, the Padarn, or the Plynlimon and Hafan.

    To which I would add the Dinorwic and Penrhyn Railways and the numerous quarries in the Vale of Nantlle. 

    Good point re Snowdon Mountain and Fairbourne Railways.  Even if there had been quarries on Snowdon I'm not sure gunpowder vans would have been permitted; a steep incline, explosives and passengers not being a happy combination!

    • Like 1
  3. As all the narrow gauge railways of North and Mid Wales served quarries, and was indeed the entire raison d'etre for many of them, it surprises me that only the Talyllyn and the Ffestiniog appear to have had gunpowder vans.  Were there others, unknown to JIC Boyd and Google?  If not does anyone have an explanation as to why?

     

    I'd like a gunpowder van for my layout but fancy something different to the ubiquitous Talyllyn and Ffestiniog versions.  I also like the look of the ex-RNAD armaments vans, but they are far too late for my era.

    • Like 1
  4. 17 hours ago, Anotheran said:

    I do suspect that most of my d-limonene will have evaporated before I actually get to do some proper modelling!)

     

    One thing I learned recently is that limolene has quite a short shelf life so if, as your comment implies, you've already had your bottle a while its probably already not worth keeping.

    Another thing I learned is that limolene is also very susceptible to contamination and needs a new brush dedicated to being used with it and it alone.  I recently ruined an almost new bottle of limolene by mistakenly using the brush used for Mek Pak.  Within a couple of hours the limolene was no longer worth using.

    • Informative/Useful 9
  5. I've gone to apply some transfers bought eons ago to a pair of Cambrian timber trucks built even longer ago and have realised I cannot remember if they are rub-down, pressfix, waterslide or what.  Neither the label on the packaging nor West Coast's mothballed website provides any clues.

    Can anyone either remind me what type of transfer they are or suggest a way of finding out that does not risk spoiling them in the process?

  6. tollhouse.jpg.df77a17eae54adf67a4f4bdb02b51551.jpg

     

    Tollhouse on the outskirts of Great Missenden. 

    It wouldn't take much to convert the Wills Crossing-Keepers Cottage to a reasonable facsimile of this.

     

     

    horsetrough.jpg.9972e3f396ba81d0b56d16347f119f55.jpg

     

    A quarter of a mile-ish beyond the tollhouse in the Wendover direction, this flower tub outside the Black Horse pub looks to have begun life as a blacksmith-built cattle or horse trough.  The low sun made photographing it difficult but it is very solidly made.

    A good project for anyone who's got a recently-acquired rivet-punch they want to get used to using!

     

     

    gate.jpg.d38c9e70a10f3657b056a7cdabbbaaf4.jpg

     

    This old iron gate is in very good condition.  Measures approx 4'x10'.

    I soldered up a simplified version of something like this from scrap etch a couple of years ago and was pleasantly surprised at just how easy it was.

     

     

    post.jpg.b0e558e6b2170e044fc72a4b6f87ead5.jpg

     

    I'll try turning something like this up in the drill for the post of the next gate I build.

    • Like 6
  7. A friend has given me his Peckett on permanent loan.  He'd fitted it with Dingham couplings, which I don't use, and during the struggle to remove the rear one I damaged the handrails that run up either side of the cab backsheet.  I assumed it would be a simple matter to replace them with brass wire, but on further investigation I've realised that the original handrails are moulded integrally with the backsheet and that fitting replacements looks like being a far from simple task - the beading at waist height being the trickiest bit.

    I guess you must have damaged those handrails at some time during the numerous drastic alterations you've done to your host of Pecketts.  Any advice?

    • Friendly/supportive 1
  8. Another hint that the layout is at the end of its life is when you find yourself accepting invites to exhibitions, only to find your layout is conspicuous by its absence when the 'layouts attending' list is published.  Recently happened to me for the third time.  It's become pretty obvious that my layout is now relegated to being a mere reserve and will only actually appear if one more highly regarded drops out.

    • Like 1
  9. 1 hour ago, MrWolf said:

    I've also seen them on beaches and harbours for pulling boats out of the water.

     

    That reminds me!

    108_2856.jpg.54ea59cfc053607ced3727194a40399d.jpg

    Not the best picture I've ever taken.  This is in a tiny, difficult-to-access cove just south of Maughold Head on the Isle of Man and was presumably the 'harbour' used by the fishermen of Maughold village, half a mile away. 

    I'm slightly curious about the stump of a chimney on the clifftop above the cove.  Kipper houses and lime kilns are very different in nature.  There was some lead mining carried out a little further south but, as far as I know, not where this is.

    108_2857.jpg.cad79646e98ac9a02b755f7a66047bf9.jpg

     

    • Like 3
  10. 108_2306.jpg.6e44eba00ab3f705706cedad69675459.jpg

    I live in terrace built in the 1880's to house the families of canal boatmen. (Sounds romantic but isnt)  These are the washhouses of numbers 4,6 and 8, located in what's now the back garden of number 2 but was an orchard when the terrace was built.  Number 2's was at the right hand end but was demolished not long before this picture was taken in 2010.  Number 8's, at the left hand end, has since collapsed.

    A lot of 19th Century terraces would have had things like this but you never see them modelled.

     

    Something most 19th Century terraces would have had was the privy.

    533849614_2008160.jpg.a5e02f12f37eadd520fec6d25c0cc3ba.jpg

    These are in Aberangell.

    • Like 7
  11. My laptop crashed the other day but was saved with the aid of a system reset.  It now works better than it has for years, and I found these while going through my files to see what files had been lost and what remained.  The Windows update that immediately followed the reset has inflicted a picture editing system that is neither as versatile nor user-friendly as the one it replaced but I hope these will come out okay.

     

    1313310214_2008049.jpg.1028066d14f0c2e632e5a4dcc5804a3c.jpg

    A small bank barn near Llan, on the Llanidloes to Llanbrynmair road.  What would normally be a simple building is, in this case, anything but, resulting in a modellers paradise.

     

     

    One for modern image modellers of Welsh subjects.

    As you undoubtedly know, things in Wales have to be bi-lingual, and the humble grit bin normally looks like this . . .

    751633164_2008249(Medium).jpg.2c596ce84e65a86babcaa1ec50ae86f5.jpg

     

    However, if you have a good imagination and a wicked sense of humour it can be altered to say this . . .

    1063906708_2008242(Medium).jpg.dfe6ea1b65bab232c9da388108adea42.jpg

    This picture was taken in 2008 and I'm no longer able to remember exactly where I found it, other than in the hills behind Aberystwyth.

    • Like 6
    • Funny 4
  12. Something that hasnt been mentioned/emphasised as much i think it should is the need for spare motive power.

    I once had every loco bar one fail within an hour of opening on the first day of a two-day show.  I very nearly left the one that hadnt failed at home because it was so notoriously unreliable.  By holding the fort while I desperately revived a couple of the failures it more than redeemed itself but that was a very, very stressful show.

    • Friendly/supportive 1
  13. I will certainly be attending fewer exhibitions than I used to and will make sure there is plenty to justify the journey before I set off.

    I had assumed that would be a widely-held view and that it would prompt exhibition managers to up their game in the hope of attracting those who shared that opinion.  That does seem to have happened with the bigger and specialist shows but having looked at the line-ups, both layouts and trade, of a lot of the smaller shows I am concerned to suspect that the opposite is the case and they are dumbing down, presumably to reduce expenditure, rather than trying to attract what custom there is.

    • Like 1
×
×
  • Create New...