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Mayner

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Posts posted by Mayner

  1. Thanks John, must look that up.
    Its a great clip in the days when railway men wore a uniform suit, the shunter stands out wearing his early 70s Saturday night disco dancing purple elephant flared suit as cuts wagons out of the train. Hopefully Dapol have a suitable figure.
  2. according to the bible...

     

    departmental vehicle no 1- GSR (ex MGRW)

     

    inspection railcar no 6 - tralee/dingle lr

     

    inspection cars no's 2-5 'drewrys' - GSR

     

    looking up this stuff is a good excercise in learning railway history - some of these cars were really beautiful little things!

     

    Not sure if its getting more like Mastermind or Who wants to be a Millionaire with JHB a quizmaster:)

  3. Lovely work, the old Airfix Lomac and JCB 3C were excellent models thankfully Dapol did a re-run. These wagons may have been used to deliver new equipment, there is footage of a down Burma Road goods complete with Lomac & Massey Ferguson digger shunting at Kiltimagh in one of the Markle Associates irish videos.

  4. A bit of work on the NZR loco to give the eyes a break, I broke the loco down into sub-assemblies mainly for painting and adding detail. The main sub assemblies were spray painted in Floquil Engine Black with a coat of clear finish, alas no more Floquil Testors are discontinuing the Floquil range of model railway paints. DSCF8169.JPG I have yet to add boiler bands and will probably use Presfix or similar lining transfers neat and self adhesive.

    DSCF8171.JPG

    DSCF8157.JPG

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    DSCF8158.JPG

  5. Thanks for the info! I'll just keep the ships and port in the background then. Do you know where I could get a good backscene of a port, preferably with a ship and a couple of cranes? Also, what do you mean by "rakes of wagons with different wagon"? You seem to have a pretty knowledge of how ports work, and I'd like to keep things fairly realistic, although Belfast Port is now one of the major ports in Europe in my layout :-bd

     

    Just my gobblygook I meant using two rakes of wagons with different containers, so a train did not arrive and depart with the same containers. The Harland & Wolff shipyard cranes would be an excellent backdrop.

  6. Excellent modelling very much in the spirit of the suburban MDs kit bashed from LMS suburban coaches. Amazing that you got to meet the CME & Designers. The UTA engineers basically invented the 1st generation DMU with the MEDs and the modern family of diesel hydraulic railcars like the Sprinters, CAFs & 22000 with the MPDs. Unfortunately engine and transmission technology was not up to it at the time.

  7. Using the same gantry to transfer between rail and ship may increase turnaround time for container ships. Few containers go direct from ship to road or rail, containers have to be sorted and stored in different storage areas depending on destination/types of cargo as they are loaded/unloaded. While the trains generally run in fixed formation, the straddle handlers and forklifts have taken the place of the dockside shunter. Your track layout layout is almost a mirror image of Holyhead in the 70s & 80s even down to the arrangement with the harbour in the vee between the passenger station and Freightliner terminal.

  8. It might be easier to keep the ship/container transfer in the background In most modern ports the railway sidings are usually in a separate area from the ship loading area, with reach stackers and straddle handlers shuttling containers between the railway sidings and container storage/stacking area such as Dublin Port & overseas. http://www.port-tauranga.co.nz/About-Us/Port-Map/Sulphur-Point/ In Taraunga and Auckland Ports lines of modern warehouses separates the container sidings from the container storage and sorting area with reach stackers and straddle carriers running back and forth between the two areas like ants The arrangement in Waterford and Belview where the same gantry served both ship and rail is not the most efficient and is generally avoided in modern practice. Rather than swapping the containers around it might be worth having rakes of wagons with different wagon. The real challenge is whether to start switch containers around between each move or even run the occasional train of empty decks to collect urgent export traffic, or simply have a number of different rakes to ring the changes.

  9. The Crest system uses a 2.4GH transmitter receiver similar to RC model planes and helicopters rather than Wi Fi technology. Its a pretty good system has been available for many years the main change seems to be the mobile phone style keyboard transmitter. Mainly used for G scale with either on board or track power or HO track power like Patrick's layout. I am gradually converting the garden railway from DCC to on board battery RC using the Australian RCS system. Finding a space for a radio receiver/power controller and batteries in an HO or OO gauge loco will be challenging, its tight enough fitting the gear in a G Scale loco, many users place the batteries and control gear in a coach or box car with a jumper lead to the loco.

  10. Hi guys,

     

    I'm looking for details/plans for one of Bullied's 4 wheeled 'Tin Vans'.

    Although I'd be making it in N gauge, the info can be in any scale as I know some of that maths stuff...

    Will be a while til I make it so no rush, just thought I'd ask now while I think about it!

    Have done a search but found nowt, unless I'm looking in the wrong places...

     

    There is a contemporary Bruce Heaven drawing in one of the back issues of New Irish Lines not sure hoe accurate or if its on line. My own version 30' over body 20' wheelbase 10'3" wide at waist level 9'6" at cantrail. Luggage.jpg

    Heating Van.jpg

    Heating Van.jpg

  11. The shed extension might have been a WLWR thing, Tuam goods shed had a similar arc roofed timber framed extension. The goods sheds more or less functioned in a similar manner to a modern Logistics warehouse or distribution depot, as a local distribution centre and warehouse. There was little or no modernisation or mechanical handling into the 1960s when the railways started to palletise sundries traffic. The goods shed would have been used for more urgent/valuable sundries traffic basically anything from a needle to an anchor, beers, wines, spirits, cigarettes, motor parts, tyres etc, individual full wagon loads could be loaded/collected by the customer on a milage siding. Several stores including Clonmel were used as bagged cement stores under Railplan 80 with sundries traffic handled in caged pallets in Uniload containers. Before containerisation the goods sheds tended to be used for sundries traffic, with wagon loads handled outside the shed. A farmer might buy a wagon load of cement or fertiliser and use"his wagon" as a mobile warehouse unloading it when needed. This still goes on to a certain extent with train load traffic in the US a broker might buy a train load of grain or other commodity during a glut and store it in a yard somewhere until the price rises.

  12. Love to see the H&S lads get their paws on these 2 guys!

    Pic was taken a few weeks before Broadstone shed closed down in April '61

     

     

    9391940890_0ab87407f5_b_zps5647c7fe.jpg

     

    Brilliant photo. No42 was the last surviving Ivatt 2-4-2T lasted until 1963. Ancient looking but fairly modern by GSWR standards one of a class of 6 normally used on Cork-Cobh & West Cork passenger services. There may have been some kind of swap between sheds as an ex-MGWR 0-6-0T 552 was transferred for use on the West Cork in the same era. The 2-4-2T may have been hand for getting into nooks corners around Inchacore and Broadstone a larger loco could not reach. 42 seems to be getting a boiler wash out and having her tubes cleaned a job that would be done in much the same way in 2013 as 1893 when 42 was built.

  13. I wanted something that looked a little bit more like an Irish hedge than a strip of foam rubber or pot scourer. I had a read of Barry Norman's Landscape Modelling and he recommended using pan scourer with Woodlands Scenics foliage net. Pan scourer did not work out but I had some rubberised-horsehair and it did the job nicely.DSCF7932.JPG

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    DSCF7907.JPG

  14. After building two rakes of coal wagons I thought it was about time to show it actually runs too. First off 3T with a laden coal special.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DzctNhlwjAE

    6T with the daily mixed empty coal wagons
    need to do some work on the sound effects :trains:
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