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millerhillboy

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Posts posted by millerhillboy

  1. 1 hour ago, Pixie said:

    Hi MHB,

     

    The Clayton glazing pushed straight out, it made a nice change not to have to fight with heavily glued in glazing. The main edge you want to paint/cover is the edge that’s an interference fit with the

    body so it’s important to remove it. 
     

    The vertical uprights are in unchanged, just painted black. I didn’t remove any material from them or trim them at all. 

    I hope this helps, please let me know if I can assist any further. 

     

     

    Cheers,

    Pix

    Hi Pixie

     Not your fault but more a word of warning, my glazing was heavily glued and did not come out smoothly at all. Mines was a small warning panel green example so wondering if it was a different person from a different part of the line. 

    I don't regret it but I now need to hope the EFE parts dept is up and running already

  2. Hi pixie

    Great work on the clayton, always enjoy seeing someone improve RTR stuff like your clayton mods, many people are happy to accept things as they come and that's fair enough but I love seeing modifications.

     

    Can I ask a few things on your Clayton mods if you don't mind.

     

    Do you take the glazing out to paint the edges? I can see that the interior shelf is an easy candidate for painting but did you do all sides of all glazing. Yours looks much better to my eye and I'd love to replicate your steps.

     

    Secondly on the spring mod, I saw it mentioned earlier and i think I can see the remnants of the vertical pickup on the bogie side. Do you just trim this down to a level below where the springs will reach? It looks like the pictures includes whats left but just obviously blacked out by the looks.

     

    As I say great work, much appreciated.

     

     

     

     

    Thanks in advance

    MHB

  3. 17 hours ago, definate maybe said:

    A Dutch one went for £150 last week.  I put in one of the early bids so I got an email with 3 hours of the auction left advising the latest price and that I didn’t have long left to win the item. I declined!

    mark

     

    And I thought maroon mk1s were off the scale in terms of price!!

  4. Dave

     Would me rude of me not to like the work you've done to the hedge, but like you say I think it works well. Certainly reminds me of that area.

     

     Thanks also as I just picked up on the Flickr photo album you linked to a few posts back, Jim Nisbet I think the chaps name was. Lots of incredible pictures of the Edinburgh area from when I were a lad!! Lots of my trainspotting haunts included. Just incredible album actually.

    • Like 3
  5. Iain

     Smashing work, and impressive power outputs as well. Load 13 willdo you will it not :P

     

     Regarding the fox lining, would I be correct in saying the loco is still in the gloss required to apply decals? Do you tend to seal your locos after applying decals and before weathering?

     I'd suggest a coat of something, I use a satin finish before weathering to seal the decals and take the tone down a notch. That's before even considering whatever weathering is to be applied.

     FWIW I use games workshop citadel munitorum aerosol, used to be called purity seal I think. Not matt but not gloss either, just a nice sheen IMO.

    • Like 1
  6. 36 minutes ago, Waverley West said:

     

    Probably Almost certainly breaking copyright here, but this shot taken from class47.co.uk. maybe shows the gap you're talking about and even a couple of gricers too. Maybe even you??! There were quite a few gaps like this along the length of the hedge at the time, but the hedge had become pretty continuous by the time of my first visit (early 2000s) for actual modelling purposes.

     

    1444793815_47708a.JPG.e5511bddc7efc137ce5599d4cab1c5b1.JPG

     

    Might make for an interesting cameo?

     

    This is a nice shot of the wall at about the time I am modelling it too.

     

    Dave

     

     

     

    That's exactly the one Dave, that's the gap I recall but there were other ones to the right, maybe another one gap or so. I think the other gaps would have meant you were closer to being right above the locos as they sat which is what I recall. The gap in the picture gives you a better view overall station.

     

    Wouldn't be me, by the time the 47/7s were in Scotrail livery I'd be allowed to the station myself and I'd be on the end of the Dundee service platform book in hand.

    As I say the gap in the hedge was a well worn spot with people watching the trains. I think you can see its well used from that picture as the rest of the hedge was pretty thick.

    • Like 2
  7. Is the track plan prototypical on that north side, more so where the 26 is parked in your pictures just above? I don't remember a siding there but could easily be wrong. My recollection thinking about it was a deltic coming in from the south, coming off the train and sitting underneath the wall for a bit before disappearing through the mound tunnel off to haymarket. If someone can remember that operation pattern I'd be interested just to see if my childhood recollections were accurate.

  8.  

    4 minutes ago, Waverley West said:

     

    You're right, MHB/Paul. It's something I've been thinking about too. At the moment, the hedge is just placed loosely on the layout and not glued down. I've been wondering whether it might look a bit daft if I cut up the hedge and leave gaps in it. On the other hand, I do want to reproduce those gaps as they're quite distinctive, so I need to experiment I think.

     

    I'm quite pleased with the hedge itself so far though and I think it looks the part. A spotter or two peering through the gaps would be good too. There often seemed to be spotters on the platforms back then too, which is something I need to add to the platforms as well.

     

    I have a short section of hedging spare, so a bit of experimenting with the scissors is in order.

     

    Watch this space!

     

    Dave

    Think you're right Dave, it could look a bit odd no matter how prototypical it was. Sometimes modelling the real thing is like that.

     

    FWIW There was one area in particular which was well worn, possibly 6-10ft wide, with a worn path up to it from the official pathways through Princess St Gardens. As you say quite distinctive.

  9. Dave

     As always just absolutely perfect work.

     

     If you are at all interested I have a recollection from the mid-80s that the hedge you have just installed had various gaps where interested youngsters (i.e me) were known to stand and 'watch the trains'. In those days you could come right up to the fence atop the wall. Nowadays there's a second fence stopping you get anywhere near it.

     I have strong recollections of the sheer presence, noise, heat and vibration froms Deltics that were coming off trains from down south and often sat roughly where you have the 26 positioned in your pictures (I can't quite remember the trackplan in that area TBH), so basically as young boy looking down on a hard worked deltic roof was quite an experience for a young lad. Unfortuantely that'd be right at the end of the deltics careers and by the time I was old enough to fully experience it they were gone.

     

     I'm not suggesting go ahead and cut holes in your lovely hedge but for sure there were certainly decent sized gaps for watching the trains.

     

     regards

    MHB

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