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Noel

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Everything posted by Noel

  1. Very precise. Looking good. How are the thin wires insulated? They look like copper covered by resin.
  2. Pure class. It really gives a sense of Greystones
  3. Hi Dave. Some vendors on Shapeways and elsewhere will take on CAD commissions. They have the CAD skills once you can provide scale drawings. The printing is the easy bit if designed properly to suit the mediums tolerances. Shapeways provide all the technical details on their web site. FUD is now as good as injection molded plastic but expensive. WSF body shells combined with FUD detail parts can now produce really fine models.
  4. Great idea. Few suggestions to add to those already made. How to solder etched brass kits (e.g. SSM brake van) How to use a lining pen How to drive and shunt freight formations prototypically How to install DCC lights in diesel loco kits (e.g. SF, SSM resin kits)
  5. Yes poorly applied static grass for the CMRC 1 gauge roof top layout I guess
  6. Just checked AIS, she's not there now, pic must be old. Yes the view of these large cruise ships from ashore can look pretty ugly, but thankfully you don't get that view from on board. These days Cobh seems able to cope with 280-320m long cruise ships, but the pax are transported away to their day excursions primarily by fleets of buses. I doubt a few two car 2600 rattle cans could cope with 3000 disembarking passengers. In the port of Civitavecchia near Rome cruise ship operators use special pullman style trains to get the pax quickly into the city. While I was on AIS I noticed this beauty arrived in Kinsale today. She left Cork city earlier. Can you imagine how busy a rail line might be to the likes of Kinsale, Courtmacsherry and Baltimore during the summer and shoulder season had parts of the west Cork railway survived. http://www.irishexaminer.com/ireland/luxury-superyacht-lady-christineberthed-in-cork-could-be-yours--for-53m-456720.html One of the reasons residents of Dun Laoghaire are opposed to planning permission for large cruise ships in the harbour is the arrival of 15 story floating tower blocks obscuring views of the sea and harbour.
  7. John, you are triggering all kinds of positive nostalgia memories. Does the nickname of 'Count Drac' ring any bell in relation to Rathfarnham shopping centre? I vaguely remember small in-store scenic layouts including N and Z gauge under glass counter tops, and 00 gauge running around the shop on an elevated shelf just below ceiling level. I remember him being a major Wrenn stockist, and my pilgrimages to the store in the 70s. Noel
  8. Some fabulous photos Finbarr. I hadn't realised Kilkenny station had been 'rationalised' so much. It's been a long time since I was on the Waterford train.
  9. Dungarvan + Tramore railways - 1980s video Video:
  10. Hi Drew. D&M Models do a nice 2600 class if that would suffice for an Irish rail car. At least the doors are in the correct position unlike any of the Bachmann's. Noel http://irishrailwaymodeller.com/showthread.php/112-2600-class-railcars http://irishrailwaymodeller.com/forumdisplay.php/21-D-amp-M-Models
  11. Will do if the weather is bad. Haven't been for many months, looking forward to getting to one again sooner or later.
  12. Understandably, and very happy to wait for the revelation of #4. If I was a betting man which I'm not, I'd put 20p each way on a goods wagon that shares either much of the chassis or bogie from one of the first three projects. Looking forward to future releases.
  13. Very nice pics. Pity the lower two didn't have mk4 sets rather than the bendy bus rail cars.
  14. Hi Kevin. No indeed you didn't, I was replying to Jonathan's post about kit availability, both kits are brass. An RTR J15 (101 class) would be nice but I doubt viable. Cheers. Noel
  15. Have a great bank holiday weekend everybody
  16. Two other very positive memories I have of model shops is one in D'Olier street, Southern Model railways mid 70s, and one in Rathfarnham shopping centre circa 1972ish.
  17. What's a kit? (in jest). Jonathan there is some hope of me attempting plastic or resin if they are comprehensive precision kits, not a bag full of plastic flash. But brass, eek, I have neither the skills, patience, time nor inclination for the same reason I use a gps chart plotter to navigate at sea instead of a sextant. Hats off to the few brass masters here with the talents to produce quality results. Now a J15 would be nice to have if perhaps one day in the future an RTR one makes it into IRMs catalog. Time has moved on. As to an 800 I could only dream of commissioning Meabh from one of the resident brass maestros. But it would have to have DCC sound, lights, whistles and flickering smoke box glo PS. Actually I've five plastic kits in the pipeline.
  18. You hit the nail on the head. Brilliant analogy. You'd ask Willie for some specialist part or item that you'd never expect to be in stock, but he'd nip through the back door behind the counter into the tardis, you could hear his footsteps disappear into the distance down all manner of imaginary secret passages, making rummaging noises, while you made small talk with his amiable assistant Sean, and after a while he'd return from the shops secret caves with the item sought. You imagined the rear of that shop was an Aladdin's cave of modelling treasure. I never got back there - it was hallowed ground. Indeed - I bought both these pair of Lima class 33s (CIE 215) from Willie Owens in the 1970s, and you are right I though they were the bees knees and the cats whiskers of A class look-a-likes. . . . and these Lima pseudo CIE wagons
  19. That could be a film set - Simply Stunning - no other words for it.
  20. Yea I know but I kind of miss driving toy steam engines - choo choo! The sound of EMD locos notching has kind of made up for it through.
  21. W J Owens in Bray was a massive magnet for photographers, aero modellers, railway modellers, airfix, and dinky/corkie collectors from all over Ireland. IMHO Owens was the single best thing about Bray. In the early years when Bray was still a sea side holiday resort, they used to sell fishing rods, tackle, buckets and spades to sea side visitors during the summer. But more than anything W J Owens was Ireland's number one RC model aero shop as well as one of the best photography and camera suppliers. On Saturdays you could meet modellers for any county in Ireland on their pilgrimage to W J Owens, 41 main street bray, established by Willie's father in 1941. I used to marvel at the window displays of RC model aircraft in the 1960s, 70s and 80s. It was the complete modellers heaven. I almost felt a sort of grief when Willie retired in 2004 and closed his doors. His shop was an institution. Willie himself was a gentleman, but it was his modelling knowledge and technical ability that attracted customers from far and wide. He was a modeller himself and an active member of SRFC in Wicklow, so he knew what the hobby wanted. Also innovating from a business sense being one of the first retailers in Ireland to source products direct from overseas manufacturers bypassing traditional UK distribution channels, and therefore had some very good pricing. Aside from Airfix as a child, later railway (Dublo, Triang, later Hornby and even some Lima) and RC gear, I also bought my first Nikon film SLR from Willie and used to buy my dark room supplies from him (chemicals, paper, film, etc). I have fond memories of him totalling up the bill on the usual back of a small brown paper bag, pretending to look startled and embarrassed at the total. If WJ Owens had not existed I doubt I would have got RC flying, nor photography. Pure nostalgia. There are few specialists left in the hobby business. Along with Marks models, John Gunn photography in Wexford street are some of the few golden nugget retailers that still exist.
  22. That is very impressive progress on such a massive project. We could learn from NZ.
  23. Hi Dave. That's a very impressive looking 15 wagon liner train. Noticed a few refrigerated containers too. Noel PS: Yes you can edit the video using Windows Movie maker, or Mac iMovie depending on which you have. Youtube also has some editing capability for videos you have already uploaded.
  24. Don't worry its not politics. Since 2012 the layouts stock has changed - out with BR and in with CIE. Just found these two photos while tidying up photo library post migration away from PhotoRustBucketRansomWare Out - British Outline - LNER + GWR + LMS In - Irish Railways - Córas Iompair Éireann
  25. Hi Dave. Is that specific to the Bachmann 36-557 decoder (i.e. SoundTraxx MC1)? CVs use is very different for specific decoders. Noel
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