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Galteemore

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Everything posted by Galteemore

  1. Great to see such progress. It’s a lot of effort but will really set off the end product.
  2. Thanks everyone. Bit of Bank Holiday spare time means that Drumkeeran Road station is now more or less done..the inspiration from Kiltubrid on the C and L is probably clear !! You can just see the corrugated waiting shelter beyond the station house. The whitewash was done in this way to assist sighting on curves. Various C and L stations were painted various ways, some being white overall, but I liked the distinctive 2-tone Kiltubrid style. The freight siding clearly sees little traffic….
  3. Yep. Pretty sure I was on that
  4. What was the consist of that MRSI special to Westport in the early 90s? I have a vague recollection of spending part of it in the NIR executive coach 913.
  5. Never even got that far! The solebars just kept fracturing on me when I tried popping the wheels in….
  6. Tell us more, Andy. I got a 3mm scale C and L brake from there and have really struggled with it…..
  7. From a scratch builder’s perspective, I’ll grant you that it’s a lot more of an enticing option than the compound curves of a regular AEC….and it does have an offbeat appeal, like one of those Neilson tanks - another case of putting straight lines where most designers put curves !
  8. The Bulleid numbers were 2660-2665….but I agree re the looks….:)
  9. REC is ‘Railway Enthusiasts Club’ - GB based group which did a lot of Irish tours - you’ll see the headboard on the SLNC pic above. 2661 may be the number - the unofficial REC archive records a Bulleid of that no in one of their photos.
  10. The famous steam tour of 64 visited this branch but I think this image is c 54-57, when the REC had a number of Irish visits, including a run on the 1115 Sligo-Enniskillen goods, behind the SLNC’s premier loco image below courtesy @Irishswissernie That’s what I thought at first but for the cooling tower….
  11. Ballasting under way. Hopefully impression of a 3’ byway emerging. I had originally been going to use 009 set track throughout but decided on flexible for scenic front half of layout. You can see the transition curve here in the distance as it begins to segue into the set track curve
  12. Thinking about it, there is probably an inverse, if not causal, relationship between the comfort of the consumer and the interest of the enthusiast. Most Leitrim farmers would have been delighted to see a railcar working the 7:20 to Sligo it if was a winter’s night. Not so the enthusiast who would quite happily have bumped along in a mouldy compartment coach behind ‘Enniskillen’ or ‘Sir Henry’….
  13. Dr Pan - as I hinted above re the toilets, got to agree on much of what you say. As a consumer, the railway is much more pleasant. What one does miss is the ‘atmosphere’. Perhaps ‘chance’ isn’t so much the word as ‘events’, JHB. On the old railway, there were much more ‘events’ - pretty much as you describe them above. And we used to talk of ‘railwaymen’ (adjust for historic gender bias) - with the sense that this was a caste who did this as a vocation and not a job. We can’t romanticise the past of course. But the facts show that some drivers did come in on days off to shine up their locos. And the knack they had (I’m thinking of Frank Dunlop here - NIR’s Chief Loco Inspector) - was of taking these events and calmly imposing that logic on them, no matter how challenging the events were !
  14. Yes I do understand that. I do think however that we have now lost a great deal more. Insofar as one can analyse these things with any degree of objectivity, the CIE network of the 60s-90s was effectively a steam age railway without steam. Most Victorian railway staff, bar the loco crews, would have seen the essentials of their daily tasks going on much as before. I have often tried and failed to analyse what I like about railways. But I think much of it has to do with the inherent tension between a fixed system and the world of chance. This is at its most obvious in the steam age. The train ran to a timetable but depending on the fettle of the loco and the character of the crew you could have a run to remember. A degree of that persisted into the 90s. Would it be a 141 or a 121? What odd stock might appear? What freight might you see on the way? Would the tablet exchange be smooth ?And those fascinating glimpses from the window of long closed branches, rusty rails trailing off into the wild green yonder. All that has gone, sadly.
  15. It’s probably fair to say that the 1990s was the last gasp of the classic Irish railway as we knew it - a railway that would attract the English enthusiasts seeking a world they had lost. That no longer applies - IE and NIR are effectively diesel tramways. At least we still have them. I’m just glad I experienced the bang and thump of a GM with Cravens over jointed rail, under semaphore signals. One thing I don’t miss is the toilets…..
  16. Excellent. Triang TT3 Jinty? May be worth joining 3mm Soc if not already a member. They have a most useful 2nd hand sales service for such items. Could be a useful way of getting 12mm stuff….
  17. This is one of their other coaches. Interesting photo angle. Shows how wide 3’ gauge actually is!
  18. Nice. Fred Dean visited just a bit later….the chair has improved !
  19. Don’t think the plastic vacuum pipes would survive such treatment….
  20. Indeed they were ! Those rough oul toast racks were dreadful too. One thing the SCR did brilliantly was recall the Irish roadside tram. Schull or Clogher Valley stock would have been amazing. Here’s one of the Belgians @Southwold
  21. Excellent Ken. I have recently built the 3mm scale WW etch of the NG Drewry. It’s good / but basic!! Great level of detail already from your work. Love the way that signature features such as the radiator and fuel tank are so faithfully replicated.
  22. Although to be fair, the old Mainline LMS ones aren’t far off …
  23. I knew it wasn’t a Metcalfe kit but that’s a totally different level again. Real sophistication of technique here - thanks for sharing.
  24. Now that’s very fine work. Looks really well - picture 1 especially impressive. What’s the process behind the station buildings ? They look really good
  25. Here’s a video of a recent model….
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