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Everything posted by jhb171achill
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We’ll leave aside whether they’ll come home victorious or not! If they lose, the executive train back might cheer them up!
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Will there be trains of Kerry supporters on Sunday?
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Indeed, Leslie - you're quite right, and my apologies to Ken and Roger for the omission! OK, there's SOME stuff.....!
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Take a vintage half-cab bus down that road, and it'll be like travelling in railbus 2A! Any trace of the foundations of that platform to place exactly where it was?
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Agreed - and more people (including me) remember UTA steam than the NCC!
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Same as many former lines in the west, too......
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I suppose it would. For a West Cork layout, of course what you really need is silver and green "C"s! Same as I do for late 1950s Dugort Harbour.......
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https://www.ebay.ie/itm/225059795355?hash=item34669bf19b:g:OE8AAOSwVnpiwz1V Black'n'tan 141 on fleabay for €143......... Also a dark green A46 for €286...
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Must be 18 years of age to buy ....EGGS!
jhb171achill replied to spudfan's topic in Letting off Steam
Ah, of course............ didn't think they'd rival buckfast, in all reality! -
True, but there it is! The point being that even if a model has a sverely restricted prototype - or, in this case, a literally unique (and short-lived) one, this is not in itself a reason not to make a model of it. Imagine if they were doing a RTR "A" class in 0 scale, or a NCC / UTA "WT" class 2.6.4T. If a "Jinty" will sell - or if they perceive that it will - one is tempted to suggest that one of the aforementined might sell even better!
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Now we need NCC wagons to go with them - and virtually nothing of any other company, especially across the pond RTR stuff, looks remotely like NCC goods stock, with a tiny few exceptions.
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This is an interesting one. Both in recent times and over the years of this website, the debate often recurs regarding the extent to which a suggested production run of an 00 scale model would be viable or not, based on how "specialised" it was in some way or another - maybe only in existence a short time, only operating in certain areas, or only used for one purpose. The argument goes that such a thing isn't viable, because not every modeller wants to model the Glenties branch in exactly 1931. These "Jintys" were common as the commonest thing in Commonland - in Brexitstan. But HERE, there were but TWO of them, and one only operated a decade or so, the other little longer. More than that, theire sole function was to shunt a single terminus - York Road - and its associated dock lines. Even under "Rule 1", to have one operating on a main line train or anything else would be stretching credibility. In other words, it scarely possible to have a prototype with a MORE restricted background - or, to translate the logic to model production, a more limited market - in theory, anyway. How many of us are modelling Dock Street in Belfast in 1959, in "0" gauge? Now THERE is a "limited market", if ever there was one; as it is in this, and only this, environment that such a locomotive looks anywhere near appropriate. Yet there it is; and not even 00 scale. In 0 gauge, as above posts point out, there's almost NOTHING Irish KIT-wise, never mind RTR. So, either we're looking at a fortunate one-off (and for once in UTA modelling, with correct coloured lining) - or a sign that supports the opinion of many, in that you start providing stuff and the market will grow. As the Leaving Cert exam paper might say, "Discuss"!
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Must be 18 years of age to buy ....EGGS!
jhb171achill replied to spudfan's topic in Letting off Steam
Why? What percentage of alcohol do they have in them? -
Still a MGWR enamel sign at Mullingar in the bottom pic - plus a black rather than grey 0.6.0. Few of the locos which were repainted black from the mid-50s on, and including this one, had the "snail" on the tender - only some of them. A tender which is so grubby that it's impossible to tell whether it was actually painted black or dark grey - WITH a snail - would have a greater chance of being originally grey. With a realistic layer of weathering, a steam loco seen in 1959-62 might as well be painted lime green, tartan and fluorescent pink, such was the layer of soot, oil, brake dust, rust and general gunk......
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New Announcement - New Improved Fert Wagons at Lower Prices!
jhb171achill replied to Warbonnet's topic in News
The extra charge is for Das Oktoberfest Surcharge. -
I don't think they're supposed to be doing that - although - for many years, while A Post treats the north as local post, Royal Mail treats the south as "international". That's bad enough, but comparing like with like, Royal Mail charges (even internally) are well above those of An Post to start with!
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In terms of the "high capacity" ones, will the seating plan internally be different in any of them?
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You can contact Leslie here on this forum - he will see your message - or PM him via here?
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New Announcement - New Improved Fert Wagons at Lower Prices!
jhb171achill replied to Warbonnet's topic in News
Well, this stuff is now well-recorded and blindly obvious fact, so fair game........! -
If I may be forgiven an unashamed plug.......... "Rails Through Connemara" by self, still available. We did the book launch last year at Maam Cross - in the middle of Connemara, the pandemic, and a washout rainy day - outdoors! Ping me privately for signed copies p;osted within Irealnd or the UK. An amazing journey, yes - though built with government assistance as the MGWR wouldn't touch the project - they knew the inevitable, which was that (sadly) like so many other similar routes, it never came close to covering operational costs in a single year of its 40-year life. West of Maam Cross, especially, some of the most amazing railway wscenery to be had anywhere in Ireland. But as emigrants from the west often said in post-famine times, "you can't eat scenery"!
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New Announcement - New Improved Fert Wagons at Lower Prices!
jhb171achill replied to Warbonnet's topic in News
For those who only have a few ferts, or only want a few, don't be put off by a "need" to buy a dozen! You could see them in smaller numbers as part of a mixed goods train along with cement and Guinness, as often the case on the North Wall - Dundalk - Belfast (Adelaide), and Dundalk - Derry goods back in the day. There were times when that train might only have 3 or 4 fertiliser wagons, with a few 4-wheeled Guinness flats in two. So if you've just one pack of bubbles and one of ferts, thats fine for a goods train within the realms of accuracy! -
New Announcement - New Improved Fert Wagons at Lower Prices!
jhb171achill replied to Warbonnet's topic in News
Certainly was! Doubtless one loco had rescued the other after it failed - they didn’t double-head in traffic ever. So that was a nice catch for you! A single 121 could certainly handle ten empties. Ten laden might have been a different story, though. -
New Announcement - New Improved Fert Wagons at Lower Prices!
jhb171achill replied to Warbonnet's topic in News
I suppose there's "Rule 1" which would allow a JM Design G2 2.4.0 or an 00 Works J15 in front of a rake of 'em! -
New Announcement - New Improved Fert Wagons at Lower Prices!
jhb171achill replied to Warbonnet's topic in News
Aaarrrghghg me too........ Stuck as I am in the 1950s and 60s on Dugort Harbour, I might be tempted this time! I always liked the look of those ferts. I'd need something in "supertrain" livery, though, to haul them, and everything I have is silver, green, black or black'n'tan; the latter would, of course, do OK.