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mike morley

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Posts posted by mike morley

  1. 3 hours ago, corneliuslundie said:

    I think it is a gauging weir.

    81375858_Littlethings27-1.JPG.335313b6cbdc090b112231e259e8ec9b.JPG.

    Gauging weirs are usually kept in immaculate condition with much evidence of solar panels and radio ariels.  That one looks a bit down-at-heel with no obvious means of keeping things monitored remotely, which I would have thought would have been a high priority in somewhere as isolated as the Hafren Forest.  Puzzled

    • Like 1
    • Interesting/Thought-provoking 1
  2. If you are still unhappy with the window frames, you might find some replacements of the right size at

    https://yorkmodelrail.com/product-category/00-scale-ho-scale/windows-louvers-00-scale-ho-scale/page/2/

     

    With the possible exception of the semi-circular arch above the windows, I reckon the tower is supposed to be stonework rather than brickwork, so whatever colour you paint it would depend entirely upon the nature of the stone wherever your layout is set.  Assuming that is somewhere around Bedminster, I would suggest a pale creamy-grey.

    With regard to the brick window arches (and I'm not 100% convinced they really are supposed to be brick.  They look a bit too big for bricks, to my eye) I would think engineers blue bricks are more likely than red. Engineers blue are a very dark, almost black purplish-blue with a vaguely metallic sheen.

    • Thanks 1
  3. With kit-built chassis, a crankpin that keeps on undoing itself is regarded as a symptom rather than the cause of the problem.  Less-than-perfect quartering is the usual cause in such situations.  I can't remember the last time I looked at an RTR chassis so I've no idea if it's even possible for the quartering to slip but I would certainly suggest you investigate that possibility very closely.

  4. P1010887.JPG.e7c812aae7c3bad64f89f11ee11a0b07.JPGP1010889.JPG.f72bd940f2ec6deb5955a2e1bce2d46d.JPG

     

    This was originally intended to be a quick and easy scenic backdrop for a lorry kit I was building.

    Several months later, the shell has been rebuilt three times (first time because the original version still looked more like an Airfix church than an up upland longhouse, second time because I caught it on one corner as I picked it up and ripped it apart) and it's on it's fifth roof.  The lorry kit never did get finished.

    • Like 5
    • Craftsmanship/clever 6
  5. 4 hours ago, Michael Edge said:

    the theoreticians always tell us that adhesion is only related to weight, the number of driving wheels is irrelevant but in my experience more wheels means better adhesion.

     

    Definitely!  I have hefty, powerful, well-balanced 0-4-0's that can be easily out-hauled by comparatively light, moderately-powered 0-6-0's.

  6. 16 hours ago, JustinDean said:

    The solebars are too long and the floor is too small.

     

    Par for the course with most Cambrian kits, I'm afraid.  Unco-operative corners and bump-stops that don't line up with axleboxes are also regular problems.

    • Informative/Useful 1
  7. P1010858.JPG.7e5a51943bfcf324c747fbb6c3707aaf.JPG

    Former village tap.

    St Briavels.  Moat and castle behind.

     

     

    P1010859.JPG.781da059e4561c0d0d226a4e939569c9.JPG

    Village well.  Still in water. Lots of Hart's Fern inside.  Unfortunately the picture I took looking in was way out of focus. That grid is about five feet tall. Not sure what the tuft of wheat(?) hanging from it signifies.  Also St Briavels.

     

     

    P1010868.JPG.adbbc6e1e62a30b27d662f31f5cc20f4.JPG

    P1010869.JPG.375e9a630ca72e238ac8faf878a13b92.JPG

    Remnants of a chicken coop.

    St Briavels common.

     

     

    P1010866.JPG.fdf0c6e6a8c446258e4ff767495ccf20.JPG

    P1010867.JPG.8ba4ad44f525d20509ecc1068ad336ca.JPGP1010867.JPG.8ba4ad44f525d20509ecc1068ad336ca.JPGP1010870.JPG.a88a6d1a30798c7b99f5d7370ab64ba5.JPG

    Semi derelict milking shed for cattle.

    About 15 yards from the chicken coop.  I doubt if either will be there for much longer because there was a JCB hard at work at the other end of the field they were in and much newly-delivered building materials stacked around.

     

    P1010874.JPG.3be8cf24a9179615465568d5843ce1ea.JPG

    P1010876.JPG.480992c5b18f962acc9f86fae8f019af.JPG

    Intriguing one, this.  You often see old rail turned into fence posts and sometimes it is of quite lightweight nature, probably of narrow-gauge origins, but this bulb-head rail is is so dainty it's difficult to imagine what it was originally used for,

    The entrance to someone's property on the lane down to Brockweir.

     

    Finally, a warning and a plea.

    Countless times yesterday we found footpaths so badly overgrown through lack of use that they we had to fight our way through and a few times things got so bad changes of route were forced upon us.  On the return leg (our intended route was St Briavels/Brockweir/along the Wye to opposite Llandogo then angle up through the woods back to St Briavels) nature had reclaimed the path completely - and I don't mean the path had become so overgrown it was impassable: I mean that nature had completely reclaimed the path to the extent that it was impossible to tell a footpath had ever existed.  Four or five times in little more than a mile we found ourselves struggling to fight our way through, looking for paths that had ceased to exist, and we came dangerously close to running out of daylight.

    So, everybody, use the country's footpaths while they still exist and by using them help them remain in existence.  Take a pair of secateurs as well as your camera with you, plan plenty of alternative routes in advance and allow far, far more time than you think/hope your walk will actually need.

     

    • Like 8
  8. I find it's stupid little things that set me back.

    I started to convert a couple of old Airfix churches into an upland longhouse farm and used a few of the leftovers to make an agricultural shed of undefined purpose.  I must have made and rejected five roofs for the longhouse and every failure has simply inspired me to try again. 

    Over the weekend I had my first attempt weathering the corrugated iron roof of the shed.  It wasnt a success but was nothing like as big a disaster as some of the longhouse roofs.  Even so, I now find myself seriously considering giving up railway modelling (I've only been doing it for 50+ years, after all) and finding a hobby I'm good at.

    • Friendly/supportive 8
  9. Not long after the Verney Junction to Bletchley line was first abandoned I took a walk along the stretch between Swanbourne and Salden Woods.  Every few dozen yards there was a scatter of insulators cast aside by whoever had stripped the cables and metalwork from the telegraph poles.  I was surprised how big they were and astonished to find how heavy they were.

    I kept one that for many years acted as a very effective doorstop.  I'd love to know what happened to it.

    • Like 2
  10. I've been on that website before and feel it only fair to warn people that they need to set aside a couple of hours at the very least, preferably an entire afternoon, before venturing into its depths!

    • Like 1
    • Agree 1
  11. A tree-house with suspension bridge access.

     

    617354486_treehouse.jpg.4d00415f6fb99690a0f69a14bacbb3de.jpg

     

    It's a sedate ten-minute amble from the former terminus of the Cambrian's Kerry branch.

    There is/used to be another tree-house (although not as picturesque/modellogenic as this one) peering over the fence at the west-bound traffic near the Coventry end of the M45.

     

    I originally posted this picture some years ago on the (superb) Geograph website.  As it's my picture I'm not sure if I need to make the usual disclaimer about creative commons.

    • Like 7
  12. Alister's picture is of Fairford, ex-GWR, in 1962, off the back cover of Wild Swan's GW Branch Line Modelling Pt 1.

    As the former GWR was still largely autonomous in those days I'm not sure it would be entirely representative of anywhere else on the national system.

    • Informative/Useful 1
  13. P1010835.JPG.34c7f1c081eef0660e6065a422385575.JPG

     

    A good example of why it isn't a good idea to work to a deadline.  This was originally intended to be a model of the watertower at Moorswater, on the Liskeard and Caradon, but getting bogged down trying to work out what the dimensions should be (and never getting it right,despite this being the third attempt) meant I had no time to include the window-shaped opening that should be overlooking the coal stage, another one under the pipe pivot or the doorway in the other side.

    • Like 2
    • Craftsmanship/clever 7
  14. Both off the A470, north of Dolgellau.

     

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    I think that's a Nissen hut hiding amongst all that foliage.

    It occurs to me that doing something similar could be a way of making use of a model that hasn't turned out too well but took too much time and effort for you to be willing to throw it away.

     

     

    • Like 6
  15. 1 hour ago, TEAMYAKIMA said:

     

    I see that you mention the acrylic version, my local model shop only has the enamel version - has anyone got a good word to say for the emanel 

     

    No!  It usually dries nearer gloss than matt and is almost guaranteed to crinkle transfers of all types.

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