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Everything posted by murphaph
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I gave the LYS-LINE one a treatment similar to the MAERSK job shown below. I'm away at the moment and can't post a pic unfortunately.
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The reality here is that "centrally funded" actually means Dublin funded as Dublin taxes and the taxes of a handful of other urban areas are transferred to and used in areas where tax revenues are too low to provide public services and infrastructure. These are called social transfers and most counties in Ireland are net recipients. I have no problem with this concept as I see Ireland as one, relatively small country. I do have a problem with tax payers in areas in receipt of social transfers mistakenly believing they are funding metros in Dublin. The truth is, if taxes raised in the cities was ring fenced for spending in the cities, there would already be an extensive urban rail network in every Irish city but the interurban motorway network probably wouldn't exist and most bypasses would never have been built either. I prefer to stick together but this means that Dublin gets infrastructure appropriate to a city of its size and importance to the national economy. Arguments such as "make Google locate in small town x" are patently ridiculous. Companies locate where they want to, not where the IDA wants them to. Dublin (and the other cities) should not be deliberately strangled of critical infrastructure. A richer Dublin means a richer Ireland. Increased tax revenues from Dublin can fund infrastructure elsewhere and a rising tide can lift all boats.
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It won't be third rail. That's outlawed on safety reasons. It'll be ohle. Luas is clearly operating at it's capacity and that's after a number of tram lengthening projects to bring trans up to 55m in length. They can't feasibly get any longer while sharing road space with other users. Ideally Luas green line south of Charlemont will be upgraded to full metro and flow seamlessly into the proposed metrolink there, therefore the standard gauge is definitely the correct choice. It also greatly simplifies purchasing rolling stock. The proposed metrolink is actually pretty solid. It's very similar to the Copenhagen metro, which IMO is one of the very best. Fully automated driverless trains are definitely the correct choice. You can ramp up the capacity to trains every minute if you need to with a system like that. Hopefully if this line is actually built, it will just be the first. A line running southwest to northeast would have great merit also some day and extending the proposed metrolink to interchange with the proposed DART at Donabate is almost a no brainer and an easy win across flat land. I suspect that will be one of the first extensions to be honest.
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The RO application for DART West is viewable here: https://www.dartplus.ie/en-ie/railwayorder/dartwest I find the timeline a little unambitious and I've read elsewhere that the Spencer Dock station would not be compatible with DART underground (who knows if that will ever happen though). Apart from that this will be a great project and about 30 years overdue.
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Fantastic thread. Someday I want to tackle this kit in 21mm myself, once I have built up some experience.
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Traffic through Kildare and Athy would be of great interest to me. I'd very much appreciate you taking a look around for anything there.
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Cheers Noel. Would that information essentially be lost to history now? I think you could get away with laden ferts going from at least Shelton, Adelaide, New Ross, Cork and Foynes to almost any point on the network. Add in briquettes and possibly animal feed and Thurles and Portlaoise seem to off additional origins. I've seen one YouTube clip of a fert passing through Thomastown (presumably from New Ross?) with Longford marked as the destination. As for that Kildare pic, any ideas what could have caused at least two ferts to end up stabled there? Possibly the tail of a liner just letting other traffic pass due to the middle road being blocked?
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Where might one find details of the weekly circulars advising of fert movements? IRRS archives or did this all remain company confidential?
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Possibly taken off a liner to Cork for example and just parked there to be attached to a liner heading to the west maybe? They did this sort of shunting at LJ so maybe also at Kildare the odd time? I saw the pic. It's a curious one alright.
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Yep, if you want to run it on DC pull out the fitted decoder and pop that blanking plate in instead.
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That's the blanking plate for DC operation. There's a decoder fitted to the loco. There should be some information about the address in the box.
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Canarian Container Anorak
murphaph replied to DJ Dangerous's topic in Photos & Videos of the Prototype
It's better parked than most cars on Tenerife. -
Ah ok. Maybe he could consider doing the transfers. I wouldn't recognise the differences between containers to be honest so if I had the correct detailing the actual container ribbing etc would be irrelevant to me. I'd just buy one of his undecorated ones and finish it.
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@Arran any chance of a 40' Seawheel like in the above pic? Definitely regulars on Irish rail back then. Did scrap run in unit trains too or exclusively as "filler" in the liners?
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Cracking pick Mark. Any idea what was spray painted on the side? What are loads in front of the scrap container?
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A nice way to add significant interest to the train. I've wondered what the scrap containers looked like before. I don't think I've ever seen a good clear picture of one.
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I think it behaves exactly as I described. Idle no smoke. Pulling away smoke. Cruising speed no smoke. The last minute of the video shows the same loco producing barely a whiff as she gets up to speed. The other 2 locos in the video don't show any signs of smoke at all. You'd need more complicated control of the smoke unit to achieve that behaviour. You can't simply couple it to either the loco speed or loco sound frequency. A loco at full tilt typically wouldn't produce a stream of visible smoke. Only perhaps when moving off. Too fiddly if you have to manually switch smoke generation on and off I feel.
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Some were wrapped in green "shroud" plastic which could often be seen spilling out under the doors.
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Bake at gas mark 5 for 1 hour.... I decided to do something with these spoil containers which are too modern for my chosen era. Maybe I will find a spot for them in a corner somewhere someday. The one at the back was the first thing I attempted to weather and it was....bad. I think I can save it though. The rest are being weathered from new condition. First I am spraying the inside as they were not yellow inside for very long at all. Rust soon took over more or less completely on the inside surfaces. When these are dry (that's actually why they were in the dehydrator) I'll apply a wash and a blast of sleeper grime. Might make the numbers look more recently patched too.
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A fleet to be proud of. They all look smashing.
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They are pretty cool but in reality once warmed up most diesels don't produce these huge plumes of smoke at high revs. The water vapour generation would need more complex control to be realistic, fading out as the revs increased, back in at medium revs then out again at idle. Only a cold engine would typically belch smoke throughout the rev range. Simply coupling the sound frequency to the generation rate may not work that well. The water also has to land back on the layout so that's something to bear in mind.
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Looking good George. Very nice.
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Lower black band on rebuilt Dutch vans
murphaph replied to murphaph's topic in Photos & Videos of the Prototype
It would be nice if a certain manufacturer of model railways of Ireland would include different inspection date stickers or transfers in any possible upcoming range of coaches said manufacturer might be contemplating -
Lower black band on rebuilt Dutch vans
murphaph replied to murphaph's topic in Photos & Videos of the Prototype
Guys, thanks to your images I have been able to put together a small spreadsheet of the subtle differences in these vans. Might be of use to anyone modelling them in future. If I come across any new details I'll update the spreadsheet, so it's a work in progress. https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1zLupSzoj6kkkA9H-s7W62MpoggdXJgr8ORQXHkTA0Vs/edit?usp=sharing -
Lower black band on rebuilt Dutch vans
murphaph replied to murphaph's topic in Photos & Videos of the Prototype
I believe the "unrebuilt" Dutch vans always had the lower black band. First pic here, for example: https://steverabone.com/RailwayPhotographs/ Nice pic of an inspection marking all the same. Quite a fruitful thread this thanks to all your help guys. A million times better than asking google anyway!