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david_abramczyk

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Posts posted by david_abramczyk

  1. Hi everyone


    Years and years ago, I got my hands on one of the "Codename: Strikeforce" sets, with the 0-4-0T, the two Lowmacs and the covered van. I've enjoyed them on and off over the years, but the wheels on the wagons (those nasty plastic wheels friction-locked onto metal axles) have pretty much given up the ghost by this point and need replacing.


    Does anyone have any suggestions for where I can get new and better wheels for them? A parts number for them would also be greatly appreciated.


    Thanks.

  2. Well, that's kinda what I'm doing; my plan is to make it all one compartment as a 'Directors Saloon', with a table and multiple armchairs inside it.


    It's also most likely going to be the oldest 'passenger coach' on the line (which depending on whom you ask, is either known as the "Yarlshaven Light Railway", or the "Jarlshaven Light Tramway"), though strictly speaking it's probably more like Departmental stock?

  3. Well, that works for me; like I said, I picked up an LMS liveried one at a swapmeet, and I'm planning to make it akin to a bespoke 'Directors Saloon' for a light railway; one that had some rather eccentric requirements of the builder- one of them being that the doors had to be tall enough that a man wearing a top hat could board and alight from the coach without having to remove his headwear.

  4. So, I picked up one among an assortment at a swapmeet a few weeks ago, and I've had a thought rolling around my head for a while now.


    By now I've heard a whole mess of things about how they're non-prototypical and all that, but I've never heard hard numbers about them- how tall they actually would be in 'real life', how big the compartments are, etc.


    Anyone got any figures on those?

  5. So, as I mentioned in another thread, I bought a second hand model of "Humorist" in pre-war LNER green the other day, practically mint in box. I've had a soft spot for "Humorist" for a while, but I also fancy doing something a bit wild.

    On the operating logic of 'It's my model railway and I'll do as I please with it', I'm considering having a go at fitting the model with post-war 'Peppercorn' style full smoke deflectors, with a handwave of it being an expansion of the experimental programme in improving her draught and smoke deflection, due to the Kylchap exhaust and double chimney being softer than the regular version.

  6. As I said, it's a rant; but I've looked through catalogues dating back to 1978, and for long stretches, the LNER was only represented by Flying Scotsman, a B12, maybe a tank engine, and three pieces of rolling stock- the aforementioned Gresley composites, (which appeared in 1978 and still appear in the Railroad range, basically unchanged even after 40 years), and the short wheelbased grey brake van; and in some years, they'd only appear in BR livery, not LNER livery.

  7. You'll have to pardon me if this seems a bit ranty, but is it just me, or has the LNER (the Grouping-era company) constantly been under-served by all the major OO-Gauge RTR manufacturers?

    I mean, going back through years of catalogues, it always seems like the only LNER models Hornby makes are the same small slew of "Flying Scotsman, Mallard, borderline generic tank engine, two Gresley composite coaches and a brake van" in the catalogue year in and year out; meantime the LMS, GWR and even (to a lesser extent) the Southern has crowded out the LNER, in terms of both range and variety. Similar things happen with Bachmann; and Dapol and Helijan doesn't make any at all.

    I'm beginning to feel like the big model companies almost resent having to make models for the LNER, unless they have the option to inexpensively retool them into BR liveried engines- which is another thing too; it feels as if the model makers line up LNER liveried stock to be the first to be on the chopping block when it comes to clearing way for new models, while BR models of the same equipment aren't touched, and are left to shamble along in the range for years and years.

  8. Split chassis?
    I purchased a Mayflower, and had to get axle centres - runs acceptably but those plastic isolating axle centres are a pain - at least the quartering's easy!
    Al.

     

     

    Pretty sure of it; since the specific model was first made in 1997, and then produced on and off until 2004-ish; definately before NEM's were introduced.

  9. It reminds me of that famous occasion back in 1985, when City of Truro was visiting the Severn Valley Railway for an overhaul; as a joke in collaboration with the magazine Steam Railway, the yard boys painted one side in BR lined black, and stuck a BR style number plate on the smokebox.

    Back then, it apparently got a ton of people riled up; but if that stunt was tried again nowadays, I genuinely would not be surprised if some group or another tries to get her painted in the full BR Black livery, and mean it sincerely.

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