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Broithe

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Everything posted by Broithe

  1. Uploaded August 2007. It looks like the original one..
  2. We'll see if there's any reaction - YouTube got excited enough when I put up a video of someone doing a cover of a Neil Diamond song...
  3. I've flagged it - again. I was also surprised that it's still there, but it is - after five years now....
  4. And, closer to home -
  5. When you start to get the hang of them, you could have a go at the capital letters, as well...
  6. Confused me for a minute, there - I wondered if Thomas the Tank Engine was available as Gaelige..?
  7. Not something to put on your application for the post of signalman...
  8. 12
  9. 11?
  10. Fair enough - it sounded a bit iffy to me - enough people have been doing it for long enough for the problem to be well-known, if it was real. There are other people reporting a similar thing when they've used PVA - so, it's probably down to the lead they're using - if that is really what it is..
  11. There has been talk, in the past, of a superglue/lead reaction taking place on a few occasions - http://www.ratomodeling.com/articles/lead_ca/lead_ca.html - I'm not sure how true it all is, though.. Time will tell.
  12. Some versions of the old Dock Shunter had milled edges on the wheels - like a 10p piece or a €1 coin. Not really visible in the picture. It does give them a bit of a 'growl' though..
  13. Here's a smallish one - going the wrong way round a roundabout.. It gets a bit less shaky as it goes on..
  14. Most certainly not. After Julia and Statia died, not far apart, Lambe's turned into The Signal Box for a few years and then the licence was sold on and it is a private residence now. The same happened to Phillips's on the bridge after Leslie and Ernie died, again only a few weeks apart. They were great days that seem an age ago now...
  15. I'm sure someone could produce an etched brass kit - and you could tell 'her' it's a special feature, specially for her to admire as she ascends the stairs...
  16. ..?
  17. I once worked with a chap who was the stupidest person that I've ever met. He was so stupid that he didn't have any suspicion that he might not be a genius. He 'discovered' superglue in 1990, when everybody else had been using it for years, but that didn't stop him informing anybody that would listen that it was really called 'cycroanylate' and I still struggle with the word to this day. He must have said it ten or more times a day. The letters actually re-arrange on the page when I see it in print... I'm having flashbacks now. To return the discussion to scalpels, I still have the safety helmet that saved me when he dropped a scalpel from thirty feet - just before his mate electrocuted me...
  18. http://www.heritagehousemuseum.com/model-railway-club-page.html
  19. I see that the MRSI will be exhibiting their O'Connell Street layout this year. The Warley Show is on at the NEC on 24/25th November. Anybody thinking of going? http://www.thewarleyshow.co.uk/ I'm probably the nearest, but I've never been - I think I might rectify that omission this year..
  20. Weird - still, you've found them now...
  21. I see the pictures - maybe try it again..? Or try this - http://irishrailwaymodeller.com/showthread.php/824-Slightly-OT-coreless-motors-and-high-efficiency-drivetrains?p=10560#post10560
  22. The traditional handles are great, especially if you're using them at home, but, if they're going to get rattled round in a travelling toolbox, then the retractable ones will stay sharp much longer - and it's a lot safer rummaging round if the blades aren't exposed. If you speak nicely to a nurse, they might be persuaded to let you have some stitch cutters - they can be useful in awkward places. There is also the Veritas scalpel handle, which uses a collet arrangement that will take most of the various blade fittings. The cap in the handle has a strong magnet and will hold around six blades of various shapes.
  23. They are seriously sharp - the risk of a dramatic cut should not be underestimated - it's worth developing the habit of retracting the blade during even the shortest period out of use. A few plasters kept in the toolbox might get used over time.... Also, if you ever do manage to snap a blade, you'll find that they fly off at some speed. I've only ever done it once, but it made me glad to be wearing glasses.
  24. And General Douglas MacArthur said "Have a good plan, execute it violently, do it today" - although that might not be fully applicable to model railway construction..
  25. If you get the leeway at some point you might even consider a single-leaf bascule bridge.. ..there's a few about on railways. You can see how they work by looking at the ones on the North Wall Quay - http://mw2.google.com/mw-panoramio/photos/medium/55484776.jpg - the pegs on the ground locate in the holes in the quadrant, keeping everything in line as it rolls back and lifts the span.
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