Jump to content

josefstadt

Members
  • Posts

    1,036
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    5

Everything posted by josefstadt

  1. Love the shot of the train crossing the Royal Canal outside Liffey Junction. And not a scumbag in sight!
  2. Great progress Kirley, its looking really good . You have great clearance between the hidden sidings and the level above them. About 9 inches? I assume that your helix has about three complete turns with approx 3 inches of clearance between the levels.
  3. Coming along nicely Vincent! Keep up the good work. Looking forward to more pics.
  4. I'd agree John. The colour looks too 'orange' to me. My recollation is that they were painted in the CIÉ golden brown livery and did not receive the brighter orange colour until later. That having been said it looks a superb model.
  5. The wooden stirers you get in some coffee shops / fast food outlets, when trimmed, would make good cut timber loads for wagons. The could also be used for making fences.
  6. Ah no. Give me the roar of a B201 climbing the bank from Dún Laoghaire to Dalkey in notch 8 with a heavy suburban train.
  7. Even though I don't model the Irish scene (actually I'm between layouts at the moment), I definitely think one will have to be acquired for the mantelpiece!! Superb looking model.
  8. I'd say that the 'happy campers' must have been suitably impressed by the amount of clag thrown up by the loco (2min 35sec) as it passed their caravans!
  9. A shed 254 x 848 mm in size - an amazing piece of work Glenderg. It looks stunning.
  10. Details of bus services need updating: 45a - Dún Laoghaire (Marine Rd) - Ballywaltrim (stops on Killarney Rd in Bray) 84 - Blackrock (Temple Rd) - Newcastle (stops on Vevay Rd in Bray) 145 - Heuston Station - Kilmacanogue (stops on Killarney Rd in Bray) Route 45 has been discontinued.
  11. Got the attached picture of the speed limit signs at the south end of Portarlington today from a train passing on the Up road. The white arrow on the blue background and the 20 mph limit refer to trains using the facing crossover and heading for the Athlone line. The 80 mph restriction refers to the limit on the main line due to the curve through the station. Permanent speed restrictions use the eight-sided board with black numerals on a yellow reflective background and a black border. The sign in Glenderg's post #5 is an advance warning sign for a 5 mph temporary speed restriction on a line diverging to the left, hence the circular yellow board with the speed limit and the yellow triangular board with the black triangle on it.
  12. The axis of the rotator is along the coupler line of the wagons. The couplers are free to rotate in their pockets. This set up could also be used for unloading Tara Mines type trains.
  13. Such a waste of money putting in the bay platform at Clonsilla. Making off peak passengers change trains will do nothing to encourage traffic on the line. It would have been far better, IMHO, to have spent the money (and probably have a sizeable chunk left over) extending the platform at Clara so that 9-car ICRs could operate on the Heuston-Athlone corridor - for example 3 cars for Galway and 6 for Westport on the 07:30 ex-Heuston.
  14. Not to mention the double Bo-Bos on the BBC and ammonia trains, the orange 201 with the MkIIIs and the 2600-class railcar also featuring in the pictures. I've said it before and I'll say it again Noel - an absolutely stunning layout! I suppose that the DFDS liner will live on at Tara Jctn.
  15. An excellent record of a line which should never have been closed. Hopefully we will, some day, see rail vehicles on the Bride's Glen viaduct again, albeit narrow gauge trams. The weather you had on the two days typifies the summer (?) we are having this year!
  16. There is one at the south end of Portarlington. If I remember it correctly it has the following, reading from the top down: a right pointing white arrow on a blue background, then a 20 mph speed restriction board for the branch and, at the bottom, an 80 mph restriction board for the main line. If I get a chance I'll check it out the next time I'm down there.
  17. Frank, attached is a (not brilliant) picture taken in Cork in 1971 of the Tivoli-Ballinacourty train showing the oil tankers and magnesite wagons. The latter were indeed in the 26590 - 26611 series, as per the entry in Locos & Rolling Stock of CIE & NIR. Hope this is of some use.
  18. In preparation for the tour, 461 arrived into Connolly from Whitehead on Monday (9 July) afternoon. GM 082 was parked outside the shed at the time.
  19. Fantastic looking set-up Kirley. Looks like its going to be a great layout. By the way, what radius curves are you using on the helix?
  20. Fantastic looking layout Frank. Love the weedy track - very realistic!!
  21. If you don't like Thomas the how about Ernest the Engine?
  22. Stunning layout Noel!! It just keeps getting better and better.
  23. Connolly shed closed on 31 December 2010. The area in front of the shed is only used to stable locomotives, all servicing work is undertaken in Inchicore Works now. The version of the redevelopment story I heard was that the shed was to be completely refurbished to accommodate a relocated and upgraded CTC centre. The original CTC building is now considered too small given the massive expansion of the system and it was that building that would have been demolished as part of the proposed redevelopment plan.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

Terms of Use