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Kevin Sweeney

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Everything posted by Kevin Sweeney

  1. I printed out the OS map of Kent Station in N Scale. Seeing the full size ground plan gave me a clear idea of the scale of this project and some idea of how much work is involved. The biggest design challenge will likely be how to slate the roof on the curved main building. I have a 3d printer which will be invaluable for doing the roof trusses of the train shed. All going well I'm off to Cork next week to survey and photograph the station.
  2. I went for a compromise solution on the station masters house. The gable next to the station house will have to do as is. On the other gable I simply cut out a hole and inserted a window. It looks a bit ragged up close, but I can live with it. A few more hours work on the landscaping and the job will be done. I decided on my next project. I've been inspired by Scahalane's amazing Kent Station model to try a bigger station, with a big train shed. I looked at Kent, Heuston, Connolly, Broadstone, Ceannt and Colbert. I really liked Heuston but there are a lot of complex details on the main building, which are well beyond my ability to model in N scale. In the end I was seduced by the graceful curves of Kent. Kent Station it is. I'm really pushing the boat out on this one, but what the hell, you only live once and no point in playing it safe. It also gives me an excuse to visit Cork to survey the station. Although I already have some excellent 3d screengrabs from Google Earth, which will allow me to get the roofing details right. It will be 1.2 meters by 0.6 meters in n scale.
  3. What a country we are. If this article is correct it will take 8 years to plan and 5 years to build a 20 mile long railway. The Chinese would probably build it in a month and the navvies of the 1840s in a few months. I first heard of this plan in 1996. Assuming the schedule is kept that will be 39 years from initial conception until completion.
  4. Thanks for the advise guys. I think I will let the hare sit for another 24 hours and make the final call then. I am already beginning to think about my next project. Having been inspired by scahalane's amazing Kent Station model, I'm certainly thinking about trying something much bigger. Something with a big train shed, which narrows down the options. Ballywillan gets long fingered again.
  5. I've spent 24 hours pondering my options with Belturbet. After careful study of the photos, I've concluded that the station house and train shed are good, as is most of the station masters house. The only problem are the gables of the station masters house. I've invested a month and half in the project, and I want it to be right. So I'm going to remake the gables and replace them. If this does not work out OK, I will have to remake the whole house. Time will tell. I will never again trust a set of architects drawings. I'm glad its only a model, after reading Broithe and Mayner comments I can see it can be a lot worse in the full size real world.
  6. looking at this photo, I see several other errors in the drawings, all of which I have faithfully replicated in my model. So much so it is not really a model of Belturbet station, but a recreation of the flawed architects drawings.
  7. Nearly there with Belturbet. I made the downpipes with cocktail sticks, sanded down a bit and painted with acrylic paint. This was a problem I'd been trying to solve for some time. I made a terrible discovery, the station masters house has windows in the gables. I made the mistake of following the architects drawings I got on the planning portal, which showed no windows. The Crossdoney model is also missing one small window, which was missing on the drawings. This lesson has been taught to me twice now. Don't depend on architects drawings alone, they maybe missing important features, photos are essential.
  8. Amazing work, you set the bar very high for the rest of us. I'm reminded of a story about the first gig Jimi Hendrix played in London. As soon as the gig ended someone saw Eric Clapton heading out the door and said are you not going to the after gig party Eric. No said Eric I'm going home to practice. You are sir, the Jimi Hendrix of Irish railway modelling. Inspiring stuff.
  9. I've been thinking about Cavan Railway Station as a future project. I don't really have room for it, as in N scale it would be over 4 meters long but it would make a very impressive model with a big single arched bridge right in the centre. I am further tempted to take it on after watching a brilliant video made by local man Greg Meehan about the station, its history and its demise. A sad video, an ode to a lost world. Facebook I've been out of action for the last few days. After 7 years modelling without any accidents, I finally managed to give myself a good deep cut with a craft knife.
  10. Getting closer to a finish on Belturbet, it's really starting to come together now. I could not resist the temptation to include a little section of narrow gauge track in the model.
  11. The GNR went all out with Belturbet, even without the train shed it is a big station for a small town.
  12. Thank you Leslie for your kind words. I've had to cultivate patience, in my early days modelling I was always in a rush to see a finished product and would cut corners. Now I always take it slow and will bin anything I'm not happy with and start over. As time goes on less and less stuff goes in the bin.
  13. Yes both roofs are done the same way. The black edge is to represent the guttering, it is 200 gsm card, stained with marker.
  14. More progress on Belturbet
  15. I would also be in the market for N gauge Irish models.
  16. The facia on the walls is made from two strips of 1 mm grey board. On the gable I used 300 gsm cards for the barge plates. I also put in a sub roof, made from 1 mm grey board. I had exactly the problem you describe before I starting using the sub roof. The slates are standard Scalescenes, strips glued to 200 gsm card. Hopefully the photos will give you some idea how it works
  17. Almost there with the station house.
  18. Current state of play on Belturbet.
  19. About two days work cutting out the windows. I cut the card out first, then applied the paint. The trusses are not really structural and remain quite flexible. I glued the two sections of the roof together first, which are made of two layers of 300 gsm card, before gluing the trusses in place. My tip for giving some structural strength to card or paper is to impregnate it with varnish.
  20. 300 gsm card, impregnated with acrylic paint.
  21. More progress on Belturbet. Got the basic structure of the train shed roof done. It is starting to come together nicely. 'For simplicity sake I dispensed with the purlins, which will not be visible anyway in the finished model.
  22. Making good progress on Belturbet.
  23. Hi Dermot I thought the story about him cycling to Mullingar seemed a bit far-fetched. I posted the photo on a now defunct Ballymachugh History Facebook group, and that's where the story came from. All my modelling work is on this thread (except the stuff I binned) and I will continue to post it here. Do you have any photos of Ballywillan, when it was open.
  24. Making progress with Belturbet. It's been an epic session of cutting out windows the last two days, mostly for the trackside wall which has a lot of windows. Happy with progress so far.
  25. It's great, the results are so sharp compared to hand cutting and it possible to do much more elaborate windows than by hand. It is for sure fiddly in n scale. The window in the photo was my first attempt at it. I had beginners' luck, when I sat down yesterday evening to do it again, the first 10 or 12 efforts were failures, but I'm getting an 80% success rate now.
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