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jhb171achill

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Everything posted by jhb171achill

  1. Among the other EXACT paints, i.e. taken from the actual companies as backgrounds for the crests in Enniskillen are: Clogher Valley coach maroon, GSR maroon, BCDR maroon, CBPR dark lake, CDRJC red, GNR loco blue, T & D original coaching purple-maroon (pre-GSR takeover), Dublin & Blessington green, DUTC green, same as early CIE as mentioned above, UTA green, CIE snail showing the eau-de-nil, and DUTC grey and yellow (again, actually cut off the side of a tramcar). Actual specification GNR railcar navy blue and cream colours, their formulas etc., are still held by the old established firm of Jamison & Green, who supplied paint to the GNR and UTA. In the UK, LMS maroon ("Midland Red") is widely available. This is the same as what the NCC and GSR (post 1935) used.
  2. Paints can be watered down with thinners for small models, but would not lose their shade. The only thing that a modeller needs to beware of is having a paint finish too glossy looking. For a model maker, professional or amateur, most liveries of most things have ample info available. The most common mistakes, for the purist, are coloured carriage ends or black chassis or ironwork on goods stock. There were some examples of both, for example modern carriages and pre-GSR stock, but not CIE. The Donegal system had some black ironwork, and the NCC appears to have painted the chassis of "brown vans" in black - doubtless for use on passenger trains. CIE painted a very small number of "H" vans in dark green... Possibly only one.... but it had a black chassis. Otherwise, wagon chassis, draw gear, wheels and roofs would almost always be body colour, as would strapping. As several have very amply demonstrated here, moderate to heavy weathering, and above all avoiding high gloss finishes, makes models almost spookily realistic!
  3. Indeed, Garfield - I'd forgotten all about that! Anyone know where that model is these days?
  4. Richie, if you're ever in the IRRS on Tuesday nights, give me a shout. I am not there every week, but would be quite regularly.
  5. Richie You are quite correct. There were two very distinct shades of green in use, one considerably lighter than the other. The history of it is this. About 1940, the Dublin United Tramways Company changed its livery from yellow and grey (cue the 121s over 20 years later?) to dark green, retaining its garter logo for a while, though this was shortly changed to the "Snail". When CIE was formed in 1945, they adopted the Dublin tram livery for everything under the sun - from timetable covers to the inside walls of some signal boxes, a few steam locos, carriages, trams and buses. The first diesels had lined green; the four "D" class and 1101/2 (later B113/4). The three 800 class steam locomotives acquired it in place of the somewhat lighter GSR green; these remained the only locos painted CIE green until just after 1950, when some more got it. In the mid fifties some new passenger stock was placed into service unpainted, and the A, C, G601, E401 and B101 classes were also silver. This wore very badly, so from about 1956 onwards both new and repainted older coaches received a lighter shade. The original paint, straight from inchicore Works, can be seen on the background to the collection of mounted railway crests - the best collection of irish ones probably in existence - which is in "Headhunters" barber shop and railway museum in Enniskillen. For those who have not seen this, it's a must. I know of the provenance of this collection, as I obtained it for the museum. Almost every single coat of arms is on actual railway paint; indeed, the Cork, Blackrock & Passange one is cut out of the side of a coach. One can't get more accurate than that! But I digress. The correct green can also be seen on several preserved buses and on loco 800 in Cultra. There are folks on this board with a greater knowledge of who owns these preserved buses, or who painted them, but the colours on thoseI have seen in the flesh are accurate. 800 was actually painted in Inchicore before presentation to the old Belfast Transport Museum. It carries "G S" markings now - this is inaccurate. It is in CIE green, and should have a "snail"; if they want "G S", they should have it painted a slightly lighter shade, though the details don't seem to have survived, and lined yellow and black.. But I digress again. The older, darker green, plus the light shade known as "eau-de-nil" (whatever that is!) date to the DUTC, and were used on all road vehicles up to the early 1960s. The same dark green was applied to some station paintwork, though a slightly lighter shade was used as well. This may be seen in two patches under the train shed roof at Harcourt Street Station now - just go up the steps off Hatch Street. The style of lining was not unlike that on the Bachmann coaches, though the bands on these are far too wide. Locos, diesel and steam, had black and white lining in the style now seen on the RPSI's 461, and on 800. Road vehicles had the eau-de-nil. The eau-de-nil lining was itself lined in gold, as were snails and lettering / numerals. So, reference the crests in Enniskillen or 800 for that accurate shade. The lighter shade post-56 was never applied to road vehicles or station buildings or furniture; just to diesel locomotives (not steam) and passenger rolling stock. The Downpatrick TPO was accurately painted this way, but is badly faded now. The RPSI's Dublin-based heritage set is also accurately painted in this shade. When in use, this lighter green had unlined snails, numerals and so on, and instead of a thickish eau-de-nil band above and below window level, instead had a single thinner line below the windows only, as on the DCDR and RPSI stock referred to. There were a few exceptions. Some railcars, of both AEC and narrow gauge WCR Walker varieties, were painted the dark colour, others the lighter green. But all had the simpler form of lining and lettering. This "railcar livery" - the earlier dark green lined with one thin line only - can be seen accurately reproduced on Downpatrick's brake standard genny 3223. In the late 50s, Albert Quay turned out some unlined stock in the darker green, with two snails per side, and apparently in white. The West Clare passenger stock bore both dark and light green - entirely unlined and mostly without snails either, while the Cavan & Leitrim had the eau-de-nil band above window level only. Carriage ends were always black in CIE times, until the moren Mk 3's and the like. I hope this helps.
  6. Indeed, Stevie! I counted at least 27... From Tullow to Dingle...... Pennyburn to Broadstone..... Killaloe to Killorglin.....
  7. The SLNCR had already obtained second hand engines in the past, notably from the GNR, so acquisition of something from the Midland or GS would have been quite feasible.
  8. 1. What Irish railway company had overall roofs at all its stations? 2. How many stations in Ireland had overall roofs?
  9. Ideally I suppose, all railcars would have gangways at all cab ends like the BUTs, then it wouldn't matter what order anything was in!
  10. This has got to be my single favourite layout. And as we all know, very SERIOUS competition isn't lacking! I love the artistic effects. Not just the scenery, good as it is; just look at the weathering too... and the detail.......
  11. Well, many Aussies are descended from us..........! As our good friends from the USA would say, "go figure"!!!!!
  12. For that 80 to work, you have to include, inside it, 7 drunk 20-something lads singing offensively sectarian songs, on the 22:50 from Botanic..... fuelled by a certain Mr. Arthur. Guinness. ... Your model is so superbly realistic, it evokes these memories straight away! Excellent!!!!!
  13. Tonight on the 1800 ex Galway was a crowd of noisy young lads with strong Dub accents making eejits of themselves shouting, swearing and drinking.... Two and a half hours of it... But at least it was good humoured noise.... Looked like they were maybe returning from a stag do or something.
  14. WOW!!! Best 80 model I've ever seen....
  15. It must have been, Hunslet! But the run was exciting..... Yes, the 80s were new. The first batch went into use in '74, the rest '77 / '78. The 70s, a few MPDs, and MEDs soldiered on a few years more. The last of the AECs and BUTs, from memory, disappeared in '74 / '75. The 80s struck us as odd at the time. We were used to railcar sets with either a gangwayed power car at each end, or a non gangway end one. Not a set with one of each! The 80s, obviously, were of this species. Odder still, the concept of 2 car sets was very unusual indeed. Almost all NIR trains of the day were 3 car, or more on the NCC. Even in the early 90s, the idea of a Derry train, once a major main line player, being a 2 car 80 was peculiar, given that what that actually meant was only one and a half carriages of actual passenger accommodation. I saw this service thus operated more than once, though to be fair it was usually a three piece.
  16. Dunluce, that is seriously good stuff! Just for info, the guards van should be all over grey, no black bits, and a somewhat darker shade. (Yours looks like the DCDR version, which is entirely inaccurate, unfortunately - as is the black chassis on their "H" van). The reddish brown used on some wagons is close enough to BR bauxite, available from model shops in England. The NCC used standard LMS wagon grey, again available from Humbrol or whoever makes their paints nowadays. You will find photos of NCC wagons in the background in various photos in the IRRS premises in Dublin. For one of such youth, if you pardon me for saying, as others have said your standards are at the very top of the game. Your depth of knowledge is also, so membership of the IRRS would doubtless be invaluable to you. There is a wealth of information in their archives, and members who are regular attenders would be delighted to help you, I am sure. Of all the major companies, though, illustrations of their goods stock does seem harder to come by in books, for some reason; possibly because courtesy of the UTA, so much goods traffic in the NCC area vanished between the mid 50s and mid 60s. Good luck!
  17. True, Hunslet! I wonder about that five car set.. I very much doubt myself whether a single power car could have done that - especially the hell-for-leather run north of Antrim. There must have been some sort of unusual formation with two power cars, which would inevitably have meant that you couldn't have walked end to end in the train. Doubtless it was the result of a breakdown or some hurried unusual formation. Pity I didn't have a picture of it. There were indeed a few BUTs kicking about then. Yesterday, going through Senior's stuff, I came upon a colour slide of a three car AEC in Lisburn station a few years earlier. The leading car is No. 111, still in that "suburban" light blue and cream; the centre car is newly maroon and grey, and the power car at the other end is UTA green.... That will figure in a future publication, for sure!
  18. It brings back memories for me too! What prompted that post was that I came across a reference to the 70s this afternoon while looking up info on something different. I could trot out more... I had a few takes about the Austrian narrow gauge!
  19. That is a stunning layout - one of my favourites!
  20. Ah! Excuse me... I belong to "kettle" technology! A diseasel is a diseasel.......! And my interest in the species ended with the 141s....
  21. Hopefully tied to the track...... no, that's not fair to the track.
  22. Having re-read this, I'm just wondering why a 5 car set was being led by a driving trailer? Anyone? Normally a train like this would have had a power car at each end....
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