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west_clare_wanderer

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Everything posted by west_clare_wanderer

  1. Great to see you back with this @Celtic_transport. It looks like you've put a lot of work into that frame and that it's very well engineered! Really looking forward to your next steps.
  2. You're making great progress! If you don't mind me asking, what is the origin of those two wooden open wagons on the front road? Keep the updates coming
  3. Thanks, they look great! I'll have to get hold of some to try it myself.
  4. Great i cannot wait to see. Sounds like one step backwards but three forward! Progress is never linear after all. I look forward to seeing your next update in due course.
  5. Thanks, I really appreciate your reply. The cobbles/setts/stones (I don't know what to call them!) On the quayside look superb. I'll have to look out for that woodland scenics stuff, as I would like to try something similar. Is the cobble sheet which you have put between the rails card/paper based or like plasticard? Thanks again
  6. Hi @Celtic_transport, I've just had an enjoyable recap of the thread and was wondering if you had made any further progress with this? No worries at all if no. It's got the makings of a super little layout Take care, David
  7. Hi @ttc0169, I absolutely love what you have done with this little layout. It oozes atmosphere! I hope you don'tind me asking, but how did you do the inset track? What did you use for the surface? Thank you for any advice you can provide and keep the photos coming! David
  8. I love this! You've obviously put a lot of thought into operation, which will only help bring the project to fruition. It looks like you're using a three-way point. What make is that - Peco, or Märklin again? Keep on sharing!
  9. That's a fab photo. Very inspiring! What are your plans for modelling the narrow gauge stock?
  10. Late to the party, but these maps are absolutely superb. Thank you for sharing!
  11. That's truly amazing work
  12. I just want to stand up and applaud this shot! Stunning It captures the location to a tee. Such a wonderful sense of space. I can almost feel the wind whipping up off the Atlantic. Thanks for sharing. David
  13. Hi Darius. I really love your plan. Simple but effective and scope for plenty of running. Everything a home layout should be in my humble opinion. I don't know much about the railways in the north, but I'll be following how you get on with interest David
  14. Noting the slight cosmetic defects the seller raises, this still seems too good to be true... https://ebay.us/m/bNsfaZ
  15. I understand what you mean about the relaxing thing Alan. My 'job' like that is painting the track, sleepers and rails. I love it! I get some music on, and get in a 'flow'. I love the instant transformation you get from trainset track to model railway, just with some rusty red and dirty brown! Mind, I cannot stand ballasting. I hate that task. But I have a pal who thinks it is very relaxing.... each to their own! You've already captured the railway in the landscape look to a tee. I think having that metal picture of how it should look is half the battle. Transforming a 2D plan, to a 3D picture is something that I've struggled with, and a reason I've abandoned layouts in the past. Keep the updates coming David
  16. That's superb Alan. The stonewalling, overbridge, station building. I won't ask how long the walling has taken! I like the way you are getting the landform in place before tracklaying. It's how we should do things to get that proper railway in the landscape look.
  17. I feel admonished. But I also fully accept what you say. I was somewhat playing devil's advocate - I do support a number of societies and organisations by dipping into my own pocket - but I think you are right, many of us are world class at procrastination. Simply, if more of us were willing to give time and money to support organisations, then the situation would be healthier. Sorry
  18. And just listening to RTE at the moment, house prices are up 12% in the last year.... is it any wonder there's not much money around for large proportions of the population to support such enterprises!
  19. Really good point. Travelling around Ireland - outside of the Dublin to Cork/Limerick/Galway corridors - without a car is not impossible, but it isn't easy. Comparatively, doing so on the big island is easier. Certainly, it is in Switzerland. Or Germany, despite the size of the country. I do agree, but the caveat with Switzerland is always money. They have lots of it. Just a hypothesis, but there is a lot more money sloshing around in Switzerland to invest in such sites. The locals have a lot more disposable income. Then there are lots of tourists. Normally, wealthy tourists with lots to spend. Add all of these factors together and it's no wonder the country can support more 'non essential' things like heritage railways. On a related point, a lot of heritage railways in Britain benefit from charity status. I feel uncomfortable about that (although not a downright hostile as I am am to posho private schools doing so). In the awful world in which we current live, I personally think there are better 'charities' to support than old bearded white men playing with trains (that's obviously exaggerated and slighted tongue in cheek, but does broadly represent my discomfort). All in, I come back to the point that we need to get behind the few sites and operations we have. Quality over quantity is the key for me. As always, just my opinions, which are there to be blown out of the water.... David
  20. This gets to the heart of the matter. But is it safe to say that Britain is the outlier? No other country in Europe has similar levels of interest in heritage railways. With Irish eyes, we can envy, but also can be grateful for what we do have. Unless there's a multi millionaire benefactor - such as a Pete Waterman - or a complete U-turn in public finding, then the situation will never change. And in Britain the same problems are increasingly faced... Ageing volunteers, ill health, lack of skills etc are only going to get worse. A few railways have prioritised youth and equal opportunities - the Ffestinog springs to mind - but within a generation most heritage railways are going to be struggling for bodies and money. Especially as the UK governments funding of 'the arts' seems to be getting no better. Couldn't agree more. Let's support what is here, rather than lamenting what has gone. The same could be said for the real railway network! The above is just my opinion as a lay person, so please feel free to tell me I'm talking rubbish. I won't be offended!
  21. First lot of books have arrived... This is going to keep me out of mischief!! Roll on next payday so I can get some more
  22. Thanks for sharing this Alan. It's incredibly neat as ever! I've always struggled with traversers/sector plates (the downfall of many a micro layout), and need to drum up the confidence to give it another go. So this, and the earlier post, are very helpful!
  23. On a lighter note, last night's Euromillions jackpot was won here.... perhaps it was a IRM forum member!? If so, that €250m could help with supporting an existing preservation/heritage project! What would you do with that kind money..... Sorry, and back on topic....
  24. That's a really fascinating point. It would probably take an academic paper to explain why that is the case. Do you think the relevant late arrival and then early demise of many lines in Ireland is the reason for this? Lots of rural railways may have only be around for two generations (for instance the 1890s to 1950s or '60s), so didn't get the foothold in society and local communities as they did in England? That's just a quick hypothesis, based on no evidence (dangerous I know). Or is something bigger at play here? Perhaps because Ireland remained a largely rural society until the 1980s? I have another though..... do you think the lack of preservation schemes may also to some extent mirror the relatively lower wealth, disposable income, and economic base of Ireland until the Celtic tiger revolution? Perhaps in the days when fledgling projects were getting off the ground in Britain - in the 1960s and 1970s - there was (relatively) more money available. Critically, grants. At this time, I just don't think the economics would work to support preservation schemes in Ireland. This lack of money, coupled with the far lower, and more dispersed, population base, could have been an influence. Feel free to dimiss these thoughts are claptrap. I won't be offended if you think they are rubbish
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