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Level camerawork

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Recently, I've been taking a fair bit of video on our Olympus SZ-17. It's an excellent camera with an amazing zoom and the ability to take HD quality footage.

Quality requires both equipment and technique though and all the pixels in the world don't make up for a wonky horizon. Keeping this level isn't easy when you are peering at the back on a sunny day.

The solution is to rob a spirit level bubble from something cheap, and epoxy it to the top of the camera - making sure it goes on level of course.

As well as curing wonkiness, watching the sensitive bubble encourages holding the camera very still so the resulting video is twice as good!

Ultimate photo-etch placer

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A nifty tool picked up at the IPMS show a few weeks ago - Ultimate Photo-Etch Placer.

Basically, a pair of pencils but with wax rather than graphite cores. Sharpen in the normal pencil way and then when handling stupidly small items, prod with the tip of the "pencil". The wax grabs the small object and holds it.

I know it's poking into the nut above, but that's just the way I set it up for the photo. The wax seems to grab metal perfectly well and handles the sides of nuts and washer plus those tiny bits of etched brass that need to be manipulated when building a kit.

The grab seems strong enough to move things around and place them, but easy to break and leaves no visible residue. (OK, you'll want to degrease the model before painting, but you do that anyway).

For £2.99 a pair, a handy addition to the toolbox.

Warehouse Wednesday - Wooden engine shed

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Engine Shed

From a my trip to Bressingham in the summer - the narrow gauge railway engine shed. 

A couple of interesting points - first, I need to note the direction of slope on the back of door diagonals. It's something I always seem to get wrong on a model.

Second, look how much stuff you can see through the doors. Model signal boxes usually win in the "building crying out for an interior" competition, but engine sheds, at least single road ones on small lines, must come a close second.

R2D2 update

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In January, I mentioned that my Dad had started the "Build your own R2D2" partwork and it's time for a bit of an update.

He's not quite up to date but getting there. As you can see, the main dome framework is built and sits on it's provided stand. There's a nice roller bearing in the top, and more for the wheels it appears.  One leg is half built and we have the bits for the second.

Generally, things are going well. The biggest problem is that the correct number of nuts, bolts and screws are provided with no spares. Since they are tiny, we now need replacements and I'm not sure where to get them from. Eileens etc. don't sell them, I think I need to check Maplins. In the meantime, the publishers helpful customer service people have promised to send an extra issue out with more attached.

The most exciting bit involve flashing lights and a small projector. I'll show you these another day once I've worked out how to display them to thier best advantage.

Book Review: Felix the railway cat by Kate Moore

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Publisher: Michael Joseph

ISBN: 978-0718185435

A5 Softback

272 pages


If you profess and interest in railways, then there is a good chance that you'll find a copy of Felix the Railway Cat under the Christmas tree this year.

A well-meaning relative will have spotted this on their tour of Tesco and thought, "That's got trains in it. I'm sure he'll like it."

The book tells the story of Felix, a cat adopted by staff as Huddersfield railway station. There are heartwarming stories as the cat learns to love its new environment and the people who occupy it.

Let's be honest - this isn't a nerdy book full of  rivet detail. It's a human interest story with added cat. We actually learn quite a lot about the way a modern station operates and it certainly stimulated a desire to visit the place, not just to see the cat. A quick look on the web shows Huddersfield to be quite a size and full of interesting detail.

There's quite a bit about becoming the centre of an Internet phenomenon. How it happened and the pressures that it places those who are part of the story under. If you aspire to web stardom, it's worth reading for this alone. You'll not be surprised to find Felix has his own page on Facebook.

Enjoyed with a few drinks, it's a pleasant read and you can generously pass it on to the rest of the family afterward. Can't say that about Great Western telegraph pole ceramic insulators or whatever else you really wanted. I enjoyed it anyway.

(Thanks to Chris Mead for supplying this after a supermarket shopping trip)



Saturday Film club: Blue Circle Cement

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Just a short film today as I'm sure you are probably doing Christmas preparation stuff. 

It's Crimbo you have to thank for this film. No, I'm not giving anyone a bag of cement as a present, imagine the mess when it is unwrapped! 

No, while in my local branch of WH Smith looking for books, I spotted a history of Rugby Cement lorries. A quick flick through put it firmly in the "if money and shelf space were unlimited I'd buy this" category, but not (for me) at £30. 

The video is interesting because of the range of transport on show. There are even some unbraked railway wagons. Plenty of lorries, squeaky clean drivers (did they really wear those caps?) and of course railway wagons as produced by Airfix.

Station lamps

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I visited the North Norfolk Railway this week, and while waiting around, couldn't resist talking a few photos of some of the platform furniture.

Station Lamp - Holt

First, we have the lamps on Holt station. These are a common design, but not often seen on model railways. Does anyone know of a manufacturer doing this design? It would be perfect for those branch-line stations we all like.

Station Lamp - Weybourne

Weybourne is a grander station and hence has grander lamps. You can buy this sort of thing from people like Kytes Lights and they will even work - rather better than the one in my photo!

While I was there, I spotted a useful piece of advice to leave you with this Sunday. 


Wise words indeed.

Flashing display

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The R2D2 kit has several funky displays included, all of which have been assembled by my technophobic Dad. So far, they all work perfectly doing their flashing thing quite happily. I'm not sure if they actually mean anything, but they are certainly pretty.



Magnetic attraction

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Not an exciting photo this one I'm afraid, but it is an important step towards completion of the speedboat.

I've been pondering for some time a method of holding the top down on the model. It fits into a recess in the deck, which is fine but there isn't an obvious method of making a waterproof fit short of using tape as I've done while testing.

High-strength magnets bought from eBay seemed a good idea but I wasn't sure how I'd use them. Magnets don't work on plastic so there would need to be some metal around and there isn't space between deck and top for this.

Trying things out over a few evenings, I came up with the following solution:
  • At the front of the boat, a "clip" slides under the deck. Simple and effective as long as the back end is secure. 
  • At the back, a screw fitted into the cover and hidden by the back of the cockpit, is grabbed by a magnet fitted under the deck. Drilling a hole in the deck allows the screw head to locate. 
  • At the sides, pushing magnets down the exhaust pipes and then glueing matching ones under the deck adds extra strength. It's important that these are aligned correctly (drop them in place and they do it automatically) for the strongest attraction. 
 Now the cover is just about held in place well enough to pick the model up by, but can easily be slid back and removed. I'll add a safety wire between the two just in case - bad enough if the cover comes off while sailing without it heading to the bottom of the lake!

Warehouse Wednesday: Cobbled walls

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Cobbled walls 1

Recently, on another blog, there was some mention of walls decorated with cobble stones. Sadly, there is only one photo, but it piqued my interest and so finding myself in the attractive town of Holt last week, I nipped out for a walk after breakfast, to take pictures of some of the examples to be found there.

Cobbled walls 2

Hardly pretty, but certainly interesting. That selection of wall finishes would challenge any modeller.

Cobbled walls 7

Cobbled walls 6

Cobbled walls 4

Cobbled walls 5

Cobbled walls 3

I resisted adding a picture of the local Budgens, which is decorated in the same way.


Garden Rail and EiM - January

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No, you didn't miss Christmas, it's just that January happens early in the magazine world.

Garden Rail features a distinctly non-garden layout this month. Chris MacKenzie's Ffuglen Station is an exhibition layout in 16mm scale that proves you can build an interesting model and still have it fit in a reasonable sized room. Winter provides an opportunity to look at indoor layouts, at least once anyway. We do head outside for a running session at the Midland Railway Centre of course, and the writer owning an IOM style model in now way influenced my enthusiasm for this...

I'm keen to include some non-scale specific techniques and so this time we have Si Harris showing how to model worn wood but using nice maintenance free plastic.

Product News is headed up by the newly arrived 16mm scale K1 Garratt. Sadly, no-one will send me one of those, but Tag has borrowed one for a short while and will be bringing us a review in the future.

Buy Garden Rail magazine

Our main feature in Engineering in Miniature is a prize winning model spotted at the Midlands Exhibition. "Lady Stephanie" is built by John Mellor from scratch - and I mean from scratch, he's machined everything including the flywheel.

There's a bit of a workshop feel with guides to cutting square threads and making a tensiometer and also a dividing head.

A free guide to the London Model Engineering show is included as is a report on the Competition and Display classes from the Midlands show.

Buy Engineering in Miniature magazine

Taylor & McKenna van

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Taylor and McKenna wagon

An interesting addition to the Beatties collection courtesy of the excellent Nick Brad. He arrived at the recent Digitrains open day and thrust this wagon in my hands. I looked puzzled and he explained that Beatties bought out the chain in 1987, so it had a rightful place in my collection. 

A quick look on-line brings up a short discussion on the Airfix Collectors forum with this info:

Taylor & McKenna Toy & Hobby Centres were a chain of toy shops in the south east of England, pretty much a fore-runner of Beatties model shops.
They had stores in Aylesbury, Banbury, Bletchley, Hemel Hempstead, Kettering, Luton, Milton Keynes, Northampton, Peterborough, Staines and Central London. They went bust in the early 80's.

The original store (selling just model railway stuff) was at 98, Craven Park Road, Harlesden NW10

A shop in Banbury? That's just down the road from me. How did I miss it?  

I see they also had their own glue, which I presumably need to find a tube of. 

Can any reader tell me more?

Saturday Film Club: The Merry Hill monorail

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Christmas is all about hanging around shopping centres it appears, and the biggest one locally(ish) is Merry Hill. To be honest, it's not my idea of a good time, but that might be different if it still had its monorail.



The system was intended to evolve into something more than just a ride for people escaping the shopping.



Sadly, the monorail was scrapped in 1996 after only 5 years of use. Apparently there were lots of technical problems with engineers being constantly called to fix the thing. Added to this the issues of evacuating a train, the system wasn't designated as a ride, but as real transport meaning a different set of rules, a problem that apparently bedevils Blackpool trams.

Anyway, the whole lot was sold to the Gold Coast in Australia, where it was built into a shopping centre.



It was rather more successful here, only closing at the start of 2017 after nearly 30 years of operation.

But what of Merry Hill?

Well, there is a station on top of Marks & Spencer. This film with truly terrible camerawork looks inside what is left.



And there has been a display mounted by the shopping centre to commemorate the system.




Dear Lego, I'm not sure about...

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The latest addition to the Lego Christmas decorations is this little Santa. He was cheap, but there's a couple of things that I'm not convinced about.

First, that beard. I understand why they have done it like that but it does look a bit like he's been gagged, or at least doesn't have a mouth.

Second, orange, pink and even green lego bricks. It's not natural. Wouldn't have happened in my day...

Merry Christmas!

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Merry Christmas to everyone who takes the time to read my blog.
 
As ever, I hope that many presents that will need plenty of enjoyable assembly will come your way and unlike "normal" people, you'll be sat with screwdriver and glue happily whiling away the hours putting things together and enjoying the task immensely.

Christmas on the SVR

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Taw Valley

Feeling like a good boy for getting my work done before last Saturday, I treated myself to a day out watching steam trains. For me, the easiest way to do this is to hop on a train and visit the Severn Valley Railway. Lots of happy train riding and book reading time with the promise of something worth seeing at the end of the journey.

I've not been to see the Santa Specials before, with no kids I'm kinda out of the target market, but I reckoned this didn't prevent me from watching from the line side.

Arriving at Kidderminster, I was surprised just how much was going on. Access to the platforms is sensibly policed strictly but wandering along the car park allowed me to watch Taw Valley being prepared. This ticked the box for enjoying the smell and sounds of a large locomotive. Steam locos are one of those machines you take in with more than just your eyes, the aroma of oily steam and soot, the heat given off, the sound that you feel as much as hear when they start a heavy train moving. You can't so this with a model.

Steam#

Under the canopy, the station was full of tinsel and people. Crowds of families all looking forward to their day out. A far cry from the gricers you'd normally find. The SVR is proficient at milking them for money with sweet stalls all around - very sensible bearing in mind this is, for many railways, the most profitable time of year.

I slipped through the side door and out tot he tranquility of the railway museum where I enjoyed the exhibits and a nice slide of tea and cake. 


It's always worth a nose in here if you like railway memorabilia, I now own an early BR loo roll holder - well I wasn't going to contribute much money any other way. Last time it was a GWR detonator case which now acts as a file holder beside my modelling board.

Back outside, after a stroll around the (better than expected) town centre, I tried the car park on the other side of the station. This put me next to the miniature railway and I enjoyed watching both a tiny train and procession of big'uns.

Little and large steam trains

The big surprise for me was the number of trains in operation. Three 10 coach (I think, didn't count) trains with half a dozen large locos in steam to allow for quick and efficient turnarounds. Modellers could do worse than pick Christmas on a preserved line as a prototype if they like express engines. That's what you need to handle the traffic all the coaches were running full.

Prarie takes on water


Bradley Manor

Warehouse Wednesday: Broomy Hill Pumping Station

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Waterworks Museum Hereford

The Waterworks Museum in Hereford used to be known as the Broomy Hill Pumping station. The oldest sections were built in 1856 and the building gradually extended until 1906. There's a handy graphic on the history page to explain. 

It's a nice solid building that would fit on most layouts. As usual, the biggest challenges are the curved brickwork at the top of the windows. 

On-site research is easy, but I'd suggest checking to see if the adjacent Hereford Society of Model Engineers have an event on so you can make a day of it. 

Slow painting

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I can be a very impatient modeller. Sometimes this gets me in to trouble when paint or glue aren't given sufficient time to dry.

Working on the boat has had to be shuffled in to odd moments of the day as I've got so much other work on that this isn't a problem. Paint is allowed time to harden fully simply because I slap it on and then have to go and do "proper" work for a few days.

Still, the results are OK. I've gone for Humbrol aluminum airbrushed over the top using Mr Hobby 1000 primer as a base. I do like spraying metallic paint as it gives such a nice finish. One that would be even better if I hadn't tried to extract a hair from the deck. Still, there is a sticker to go over this.

The Red Arrows acrylic red is Humbrol applied from a rattle-can and very nice it is too. With he aid of a hair drier, it was touch dry really quickly. I'm not entirely happy with the line between the two colours, the Tamya masking tape didn't work as well as it normally does, but I feel that a black line delineating the two will look better anyway and hide a multitude of sins.

Now to the fun bit. Getting brushes out to add detail bringing the model to life. . 

Paint your driver

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There's not much to "come alive" on this boat, but what there is is all here.

I think it was the resin-head driver figure that sold the kit to me as much as anything and so I've enjoyed painting his face. Nothing exciting, just a coat of flesh dry-brushed with flesh+pale grey. Goggles picked out in matt aluminum and leather. Looking at drivers from the 50s and 60s, they weren't the walking billboards todays are but I felt some BP symbols on the chest (I didn't fancy hand painting Castrol ones) would break up the regulation white overalls.

The exhaust and air scoop are painted with a shiny gunmetal, which is really nice, especially since it's brush painted. I couldn't be bothered to mask and spray.

At the back, number 9 is my club racing number and it looks good on the back. The only other lettering being "Miss-Chief" on the side of the cockpit. I wanted a hand-painted feel in the manner of a WW2 aircraft. Not sure this is right, it will stay until I see something better.

Anyway, once I find the can of red paint, I just have to do the rudder and we are ready for final assembly.

Saturday Film Club: Michael Palin on branch lines

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I'm guessing that you've got a little more time to watch railway videos on your computer this weekend, so here's a longer than normal film featuring Michael Palin, who is every bit s nice a bloke as you think, introducing some BBC clips. 

There's a lot of Betjeman of course and you may well have seen this bit before, but either open some more chocolates and stick with it, or fast forward as he's not the only star. 

Palin has been well briefed and comes across as knowing his stuff enough to read the script like it's not a script. He also fits the "look" required for this slightly nerdy subject. For a change, there will be no fast-forwarding an idiot presenter!

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