Happy New Year!
Hope that 2022 is good for you!
Stay safe, build models!
Recording my progress, or usually the lack of it, in building kits, creating model railways and other related and sometimes unrelated matters!
As the door of 2021 closes and the door to 2022 opens there is a similar situation with the two sheds for my narrow gauge railway. As I said a few posts back, one shed will have its doors open. Unfortunately the kit doors do not include the internal detail of the doors or the floor. The floor has already been made and described a couple of posts ago so the next job on the non-Mrs. Wood list of jobs was to make some internal detail on the doors.
The external detail on the doors.
I have also added the roof sheets and the window frames to the sheds and although not finished yet they are taking shape. The doors still need another coat of paint on the internal side which will probably get done sooner than the door that is still on Mrs. Woody's list of jobs for me! Just don't tell her!
Well it feels like he laundry! Another day at the Rocks by Rail Museum with a barmy 14 degrees Celsius at the end of December! First we dig the ballast out, then we wash it and then we put it back just like you put the laundry away after washing! Each stage involves shoveling and that is where my shovel skills appear to come in handy. Its back breaking work but with a great crew, some interesting chat and a few jokes it soon gets done.
The ballast is transported after washing in the Trout ballast wagon. This has discharge chutes either side and in the middle. The three white wheels on the end of the wagon each control one of the chutes although on this wagon the middle one doesn't work which is a pity as that is where the ballast is needed! However some muscle power sees the piles either side of the track spread in the middle to give a nice even spread of ballast.
Ballast arrives....
Only another mile or so to go! That should make 2022 interesting!
Over the past few days and defying my normal one or two days of frenzied activity and then nothing for weeks, I have made further progress on the narrow gauge layout - must really think of a name for it!
The hillside that I started constructing a few days ago and left in the kitchen has dried undetected by Mrs. W and as you can see has dried to a light earth shade - lovely!
As shown in a post a few days ago this hillside will be at the side of the canal wharf. Between the hill and the wharf there are two sheds which are supposed to represent a small traders storage sheds. The sheds themselves come from the Wills SS12 Station Garage Kit but can be built differently to that supposed and instructed in the kit giving two shed like structures. Another case of the male of the species not following instructions! However in this case it does work!
I had already constructed the walls of the shed back in the summer when I wanted to get a feel for where various buildings would go on the layout. The kit is moulded in a white plastic and as I have previously highlighted in this blog white attracts the eye. Whilst I had plans to paint the sheds a blue I did airbrush all the parts, including the inside of the sheds, with Vallejo's black surface primer. As a hint, when I have a large number of parts that need to be airbrushed I tend to get a piece of plywood or cardboard to fasten them onto to be painted. You can use Blutack or what ever your chosen poster temporary adhesive is to fasten the parts to the board or you can use masking tape. if you turn the sticky side up and fold the two ends over on themselves before fastening the ends to the board you are left with a strip of stick masking tape to which you can fasten the parts that need to be painted.
I do plan to have a door open on one of the sheds so a wooden floor was required. There is nothing better to represent wood in model form then wood itself. A small piece of balsa sheet was cut to size and then planks forming the floor were scribed into the balsa wood using a straight edge and the back of a scalpel blade. Using the blunt back of the scalpel means you don't have much risk of cutting right the way through the wood and it gives a nice visible groove in the wood.
I also started on the cobbled surface which will cover the wharf area and into which the rail tracks will be inlaid. I found, in the WMD HQ stock pile of things bought long ago and which may come in handy one day a couple of sheets of vacuum formed plastic cobbles which should do the job.
A bit of cutting has the first piece fastened in front of the two sheds.
If I can manage to keep the momentum up hopefully the whole scene will come to life in a few days. However I understand Mrs. W does have a new list of jobs for me for 2022! Gulp!
Not the nasty war time V2 rocket but a much more pleasant LNER class V2 locomotive. My other Christmas present was this beautiful Bachmann LNER V2 with DCC sound chip. It is a truly stunning model and initial running shows that it runs and sounds as good as it looks. If you want to find out about these locomotives you can go here where Wikipedia will inform you better than I can!
Having escaped to the man cave AKA The Room of Gloom, for a second night thanks to the delights of umpteen TV channels that keep Mrs. Woody's interest in Murder Mysteries satisfied (apparently the current favorite is one called Vera) there has been further progress made on the narrow gauge layout. This time on the landscape at the end of the canal wharf. This will be a small hill with two small sheds in front of the railway siding that goes along the end of the wharf. I have constructed the whole area of this hillside development on a sub base of 2mm mounting card. It makes it easier to work on as I can bring it to the workbench and work in seated comfort. The hill itself was constructed with mounting card profiles with an infill of the same foam that I used for the river banks. The usual choice would be polystyrene which would result in the recreation of Santa's Grotto in my man cave as I carved it to shape and all those spheres of that make up the material would fly everywhere. I guess though it might not be The Room of Gloom if that did happen!
The profiles are being added.
...being overlaid with some kitchen roll - other brands are available!
Finished on the work bench.....
...and whilst Mrs. W is absorbed with TV detective Vera it is sneaked into the warmth of the kitchen to dry. Wonder if Mrs. W will detect that?
I also had time to add another coat of acrylic varnish to the river bed and banks and being extra generous with it as I need this to stick a coating of sand to make the river bed. I have a feeling I will need to do this several times but I won't know until it dries and I find out if it has worked and iof so how well!
With it being Christmas Day yesterday there was much excitement at WMD HQ as presents were unwrapped. Mrs Woody got various items including a new fancy hairdryer which makes the possibility of the old one repurposing itself into the man cave AKA The Room of Gloom a possibility!
The cats were pleased with their cat nip packages which they soon were playing with. Sammy, who passed away this year used to love these and would end up drooling and rubbing the package all over his head in a frenzy of cat delight! Although Chloe and Holly didn't droll as much they still found a good few minutes to play with these small packages.
I did get a number of packages one of which was indeed small but contained a wonderful 009 loco.
This beauty is the Bachmann Ffestiniog Railway Double Fairlie 'Livingston Thompson' in lined maroon complete with DCC sound chip. I had to escape to the Room of Gloom for an hour or so whilst Mrs.W was sorting out handbags or something like that, and soon had it going round my 009 layout, even if it was un-prototypically hauling a rake of Lynton and Barnstable coaches! It runs great and is a fantastic addition to the 009 fleet. Gives me some increased impetus to finish the layout. There were some bigger packages but more about those another day. In the meantime I am enjoying this nice loco which indeed came in a small package!
Merry Christmas!
Hope that you all have a great time and that 2022 is a good one for you!
Stay safe and build models!
👍
In my last post I described how I had used sellotape around the bridge abutments to protect them from the sloppy filler mix that I was sloshing about as I constructed the river banks of my narrow gauge layout - all part of my working smarter not harder as I get older philosophy. Well it did work. I managed to extract the abutments and there was a fair amount of filler on them.
Peel off the selotape and hey presto....
Next up was giving some colour to the brickwork so it was like being back at school as the colouring pencils came out. A few good quality artists pencils in reds and browns just randomly run over the brickwork pick out the bricks whilst leaving the mortar course a nice grey from the primer coat. If you look at real bricks they are not just one colour - they have a multitude of colours in them which this pencil method of colour gives a fair impression of.
The finished items ready to go back in place. Once the filler is dried on the river banks and in the river bed I will seal it with a coat of varnish before putting some river bed type debris in place. Then the plan is to pour a resin in to create the river which has all sorts of possibilities of going wrong unless I am really smart in my older age!