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jhb171achill

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Everything posted by jhb171achill

  1. M50 it is from southside..... those marathons (and cycle races!) are a scourge! Wowwww!
  2. Wow!! More expensive than a locomotive! Probably viable for very large layouts only?
  3. Well done. This is a masterpiece of a layout, as is Arigna. What next from this stable! A Blessington tramway branch? Courtmacsherry? Glenties? Achill........... now I'm drooling again. Mop needed. See yiz at Raheny tomorrow!
  4. Brilliant, brilliant stuff! The teak coaches look just right, as I recall them. A point of detail: while the UTA put red hand roundels on a few railcars still in GNR navy and cream, older wooden coaches would only get the UTA logo if painted green. On this scale, though the UTA logo looks a bit overscale, and could at a distance look like a faded GNR crest! Excellent work as always. I have struggled to think of a reason to bring something UTA to my layout, based at the same period - but, while the location is fictitious, it's somewhere in the south - think Mallow-Waterford or South Kerry area. Maybe a visiting pigeon special!
  5. Its couplings are compatible with the Tardis.
  6. Have a look at the Worsley stuff, but also regarding drawings, the "New Irish Lines" magazine (Allen Doherty) has had drawings in the past - I think - but has certainly had very interesting articles on Irish model carriages. Look at the absolutely superb work, for example, of Colm Flanagan.
  7. Irish coaches were almost without exception of Irish loading gauge. The few exceptions were a handful of ex-LNWR, LMS and other British lines - carriages brought over here and re-gauged, used primarily by the NCC and GNR. It’s almost easier to scratchbuild. If brass daunts you, try plastic sheet?
  8. This may still be seen on the end of one of the MGWR six-wheelers at Downpatrick. For the eagle-eyed, note the older CIE darker green, and a badly faded later lighter green livery. I might add that in all cases, the paint shown is worn and weathered.
  9. The UTA lined its loco-hauled (but not railcar) carriages in straw, which itself was lined both sides in red. On the BCDR Golfers’ Saloon at Downpatrick, one end still shows this; the only surviving example of UTA lining in existence. The width of the entire line is one inch. Here it is: It might be added that the lining on most of the Whitehead RPSI carriages (yellow and red, separately), is specifically an RPSI livery. It was never meant to be a copy of UTA - it was designed as an RPSI livery.
  10. He did the Schull & Skib; the rocking and rolling of the 4 wheel first class coach, in which he was the sole occupant, made him sick (over the end of the balcony!). He said it was the only time he was ever seasick in a train!
  11. I don’t care how long it takes, but I’ll be looking for one!
  12. 4mm..... I will see Jim at the weekend, all being well. I dont know if he has 7mm ones.
  13. An interesting thread, Colin. Very little British stock can do anything other than the very vaguest resemblance to Irish stock. Some English LMS stuff can resemble some NCC stock, and the old Triang GWR brake third with the bowed-in ends resembles a pair of Waterford, Limerick & Western Railway brake thirds built in 1898 and withdrawn in 1955 by CIE. (One compartment too many, though). Thats about it. Worsley Works do a great range of Irish stuff, but as seen elsewhere on this site, they take a bit of skill and experience.
  14. They only appeared on the Derry Road on special trains, and within about a 12-14 month period just before it closed. To the end, all normal routine services were ex-GNR diesel railcars on passenger work, and steam on the goods. I have an idea that an A did a trial run maybe as far as Dungannon, but I’m not sure. No C, B101, 181 or B121 ever went there.
  15. I tried a brass kit years and years ago, when dexterity and eyesight were a lot better than now. I made a pig’s ear of it, so for me it’s a “brassmaster” every time. I still would encourage those of tenderer years to give it a go, however, but on something cheap and simple! The satisfaction gained from completing such a thing would be worth the hours put it.
  16. I’m standing on my side, Leslie. They look ok that way.........!
  17. Your car stolen, Leslie? Absolute pond life filth who do that sort of thing - sorry to hear it. Hopefully they’ll meet 074 at a crossing...... More importantly I hope you recover physically ASAP. My own order stands; herewith another photo of the species in GSWR guise for those interested in that era. It’s possible that when brand new it was all-black, with same markings except the “G S W R” letters were then bigger. And other older GSWR stock too. Elderly though it looks, examples of all of these survived into CIE times, some as late as 1957-60.
  18. I remember reading somewhere years and years ago that CIE buses could sometimes be seen in Britain (particularly London) in lieu of CIE Tours buses. Which is exactly what the scenes above look like! I saw a LLSR artic in Dublin in the late 1970s. It carried a number on the trailer like a wagon number; their bus conductors were still known as “guards”, and the tractor unit of the lorry was in the dark green carried by erstwhile locomotives. It looked like a throwback to the past. They can’t have had many trucks on the road, as they tended to hire them in from CIE. I travelled on several Lough Swilly bus services in the ‘70s. I regret not going up to Derry a few years ago to get one of the last ones. jhb171Senior footplated one of the big tender locos into Burtonport back in the day; I was never able to achieve THAT!!
  19. Who are these folks? F. Sean Ryan/Philip Mc Hugh Models
  20. I see that CIE have managed to provide a cross-channel service to the area, via Expressway bus!
  21. Delighted to get this little gem in the post today. This is the second Jim Poots bus I’ve got, and they are absolutely superb kits, very easy to put together and very accurate.
  22. Quite possibly - I don’t have it to hand.... Bill would remember it shunting. Which leads me to think; it’s years since I’ve seen him. Must make contact!
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