Monday, March 26, 2012

Retaining wall photos

Here are some photos of the retaining wall mentioned in the last couple of posts.

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Retaining wall along the backboard. I will add some more painted trees and scenery I think to break the sky-wall boundary.

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Further down towards the road which will give the impression of going up the behind the wall. The paper plans show where the terrace houses and shops will more than likely go.

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Close up of the wall. Not bad in my opinion.
Through the week not much happened apart from glueing down some of the Terrace Houses plans to thick (2mm) cardboard. I was intending to do the Medium and Light card plans as well but didn't have enough 1mm and 0.5mm in stock, so I had to wait for the weekend to buy some more. So hopefully this week I can get around to this but time will tell as I have a few other things to attend to.

One thing I failed to do and Lachlan reminded me was that the previous weekend his Alaska Railway diesel started to have running troubles. I was going to look at this but forgot. So another maybe!

Talking about Lachlan, I have taken a couple of photos of his recent addition to his layout so go on over to Beaver Springs. The other thing I did through the week was to order a Hornby Railway Train Pack (steam loco, open wagon, closed wagon and brake van) that he wanted for his birthday. So hopefully this will arrive before his birthday in early April.

Thats all from me this week.

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Wet weather = Shed Time!

During the week there was no modelling due to the aforementioned busy evenings but the weekend was another story. After the usual Saturday morning running around between shops (not model shops mind you!) so that the missus could use my Mastercard, the afternoon arrived as did the wet weather. After a little nap with son #2 after lunch we adjourned to the Shed as the yard was too wet to do anything and the odd skudding shower making things even more wet. I glued up the remaining 3mm MDF retaining walls around the skyboard on the Kensington Hill side and added the rubble wall paper sheeting from Scalescenes. A quick spray of Dullcote finished the day's modelling. Sunday arrived and with it a phone call from a mate who we were going to catch up with over BBQ lunch. The lunch was off due to illness in his family. This freed up the afternoon to do something else. With windy showers scooting through there was only one thing for it and that was to take the boys to, you guessed it, The Shed!

I spent about an hour with Lachlan on his layout. He had scrounged some old buildings that were being thrown out at the Club. I had soaked these in a bucket of water a few weeks ago to separate them from the chipboard they had been glued on. One of the buildings was an old style American hardware store with a loading deck. We cleaned it up and looked around where it could be placed. Near the small siding would be perfect. So I scraped out the grass to add a road to the loading ramp which also went alongside the siding. I then glued the building into place. Doesn't look to bad! I then did some minor repairs about his layout.

I then spent the remaining time in the afternoon putting the capstones onto the retaining walls, spraying Dullcote, painting the wall end edge black, as well as painting the internal edges of the rail overpass black. Looking good! It certainly breaks the monotony of the sky blue backboard. If I get a chance this week I'll take a photo or two to show what's been going on.

I even had twenty minutes to take my Class 47 for spin to keep everything working.

Oops forgot to mention that although there was no modelling through the week, I have been researching NSWGR station buildings, collating the Club's modelling competition survey results, and getting ready to run another survey on the HO layout's suggested features.

So this week isn't looking that busy (except for Wednesday night), so I might be able to continue with the terrace houses which have been sidelined for the last two weeks.

Monday, March 12, 2012

Ever so small bit of work this week

As expected this week was busy with non-modelling evening work. Late Saturday morning I popped into Horizon Hobbies to see what was on sale, but couldn't see anything I could afford.  Saturday arvo was Club Day so got down there to discuss the HO layout a bit further (I was a tad late in on this one), had the Monthly Meeting, took a visitor and his son on a tour of the club after the meeting, Lachlan took his N scale train for a spin, and I had a general chit chat.  Late Sunday morning Son # 1 was invited over to his friends' place for a play date. Fortunately their Dad is also a train modeller, so we adjourned to his train room for a bit of a talk while the boys ran riot outside. Late Sunday arvo I was able to think a bit more about the retaining wall on the KH side of the layout. I've decided not to have a tunnel mouth but infer a road bridge above the track. So I cut down some strips of 3mm MDF to use as the backing for the retaining walls and will glue the Scalescenes rubble wall sheet to these in due course. Not sure again about this week as once again busy in the evenings with other things. Maybe later in the week or the weekend.

At the moment I am doing some research into the NSWGR layout (exhibition or permanent - not sure yet) that I am planning for in the future once Illavearf is finished and I know where we will be living for the next 20 years or more (possible move being considered at present). I've done a fair bit of lef work on the Molong to Dubbo and onto Narromine and Peak Hill lines but need to research station types in the area. Mr Mackie will be loaning his plan book to me (thanks!). If at the end the information is still not really there, I may have to undertake 'modellers licence' and decide on a particular type. As parts of this line are no longer active this might be the way forward, or I base the layout on the route and station location plans but modify the location name to get away from the purists! Keeps me busy.

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Progress this week on the modelling front

A bit of progress this week on Illavearf. Wednesday evening I was able to start gluing down the Scalescene terrace houses onto cardboard. I didn't get very far as I was watching a movie (Beneath Hill 60 - not a bad flick) on my laptop at the same time. Not a good idea as the flick started to get more interesting than gluing down paper! Well it's a start. Saturday arrived and with it a rainy day.The morning was busy with the usual shops outing but the afternoon was spent in the shed for longer than an hour! Son # 2 didn't want his arvo nap and was getting feral. The missus was arcing up and said take them to the shed. OK, I don't need to be told twice ;-) So while the boys mucked about with Lachlan's layout and various other things I got to do some stuff for me for a change. I had printed out some Scalescene's rubble wall sheets which I used for the village retaining wall. A thin layer of PVA on the 3mm MDF sheet cut last weekend was followed by the paper sheeting. Using a hobby knife I sliced off the overhang and then sprayed dullcote to protect the ink. A few blobs of liquid nails on the reverse side of the MDF and this was then glued into place. Not bad. I then followed this with the capstones (again Scalescenes from the same design pack) on the top of the rubble wall. Looks pretty good. It was then time to go inside for the night.


Sunday arrived and once again the morning was shot with other commitments. Lunch was followed by a nana nap with Son # 2. Didn't think this was going to happen but he toddled in and climbed up onto the bed where I was having a post-lunch rest. After a few minutes he wanted me to go to sleep with him. Once again I don't need to be asked twice, and we both nodded off for about 1.5 hours. We eventually got back to the shed late in the arvo. i was hoping to do another retaining wall cutdown but Lachlan's DC engine decided not to work for some reason. So I spent the next hour troubleshooting and eventually found a loose connection at the motor. The connetion wasn't actually broken but if tension was removed from the wire it wouldn't work. Bizarre. Fixed by pulling the wire tighter. By then the afternoon was gone and it was time to get the boys ready for dinner, and have a drinkie while getting dinner ready.


BTW Scalescenes have released a new model of a Gantry crane for an intermodal facility. Go to here for a look.

Also on Friday my mate PK showed me a neat little computer, the Raspberry PI, which might just be the ticket in placing a very small computer with JMRI installed on the layout without going overboard with Netbooks, etc. Unfortunately the little thing was sold out, 12000 sold globally in one day! At US$35 it's a bargain, just add low end monitor, keyboard, mouse and wireless connectivity and Bob's your uncle. JMRI still have to fix a few things on the software to allow it, but the newsgroup is saying as soon as one of the developers gets his hands on a Raspberry Pi, then fixes wouldn't take that long to do and test. Here's hoping. In the meantime, hopefully PK has put his usual backorder in?
So this week is looking a tad busy on a couple of evenings. Not sure whether I will go to one of them. Either way modelling might have to take a backseat as I have a couple of job interviews next week that I probably should put some 'homework' into for preparation for them? Next Saturday is Club Day so the afternoon will be busy down at the club. The missus has mentioned that she wouldn't mind doing something on Sunday as she is getting cabin fever! So the liklihood of anything progressing this week is very low. Let's see what the week brings. You never know!