Well, yesterdays filming antics of my 00 gauge layout have now been edited and the resulting 18m 49s of final video are now up on YouTube.
This is now my 29th video that I have uploaded this year. If only I were as productive building models!
Recording my progress, or usually the lack of it, in building kits, creating model railways and other related and sometimes unrelated matters!
Well, yesterdays filming antics of my 00 gauge layout have now been edited and the resulting 18m 49s of final video are now up on YouTube.
This is now my 29th video that I have uploaded this year. If only I were as productive building models!
And if Mrs. Woody is reading this new stock means I have it for ages! I have taken a break from bridge building today and took the opportunity to change some rolling stock on my 00 gauge layout. It is great having different rolling stock but it is a pain and takes time packing items away into their boxes given the amount of packaging that comes with model trains these days. However it keeps them safe which is important especially in my Man Cave with my clumsiness!
New rolling stock comes in the form of three Southern Railway coaches that I found on eBay for a very reasonable £25. They match the Southern Railway Schools Class locomotive that I got from Mrs. Woody. So if she questions me about the coaches I can justify them being necessary to adorn her gift to me! Does that work???
The other rolling stock is new on the layout but I have had the wagons for some time, regrettably forgetting about this pandemic purchase and having never run them! Well that has changed today and these Accurascale cement wagons do look good.
I also took the opportunity to do some videoing for another YouTube video. I will link it here when done.
One of those jobs on Mrs. Woody's list that I have put off for sometime was actually completed today. That job was paint the tiles on the front of the house. Originally a textured sand finish when the house was built in the 1970s the tiles have lost much of their texture over the years with the weather. I did paint them some years ago but even that has weathered. Having changed the front door at the beginning of the year to an Anthracite coloured one meant it made sense to change the colour of the tiles to anthracite to match. At least I could tell which tiles I had painted. Five hours saw the job done and it does look a lot better but my back does ache!
Two thirds done - well nearly! The bridge deck is just about finished as is one of the abutments. Just the other side to do now.
The abutment now has its supporting pillars attached along with side wall and road/footway surfaces.
I had to 'test' how the two parts fitted.
And why not add a couple of vehicles just to see!
Next I needed some supporting columns that were cut from the embossed sheet. With care the brick courses line up which does make a difference if you look closely.
I built four of these as I will need two for the other parapet.
I have added internal bracing as the embossed sheet is not that thick and does bow.
The card substructure was encased in embossed sheet.
Where the bridge deck and girders sit on the parapet i added what is supposed to be a stone or concrete bed using plain plastic card. Once painted it will stand out from the brick. I have leant one of the supporting columns roughly where it will finally be placed.
I will talk about saving money later but first off with the weather being more like it should have been in June, I ventured to the Rocks By Rail Museum. The event of the year is on Sunday and the grass areas where visitors walk has not seen my attention for three weeks or so! Therefore, after a couple of weeks of fun with the dragline excavator it was back to the more mundane mower! The grass had certainly grown but at least it is now looking a bit more cultivated then before after several hours of work! The temptation of getting on that dragline in the background was hard to resist but I did!
Well the steel girder bridge, which is actually card and plastic sheet but as it is a model we won't worry about that, has really come along. The outside jointing strips on the plate have been added which gives some interest to what was otherwise a featureless surface.
I think I need to turn my attention to the bridge abutments next.
The steel girder bridge for my 00 gauge My Last Great Project Layout is coming on to the point that the bridge deck actually looks like a bridge deck! I added a card road surface to the plastic card bridge deck. Onto that I added footways either side cut to a suitably narrow width - footpaths across older bridges were never that wide! Before adding the footways I used the back of a scalpel blade to emboss the kerbs. You can just about make the detail out in the second photo. It should show a lot better once painted. I have also started detailing the bridge plates with jointing strips made up of a cut strip of plastic card and then some Slaters strip added along the middle. From a distance it looks OK!
Whilst I know a lot about plates, especially washing them if Mrs. Woody is reading this, the plates I am talking about here are the steel plate ones that form the sides of certain bridges.
For my model bridge it will have steel plate sides so having cut the floor of the bridge from plastic card I was then able to cut the sides to size. Replicating the construction of such plates I cut 4mm strips to fit around the edges of the plate to give the reinforcing strip that runs around such plates. In addition I then started to make some joining strips to fit along the plate. Its all a bit fiddly but somehow therapeutic! The photos probably illustrate better then I can write!
Going back to washing plates I may have earned my way out of this chore for a day or so at least as one of Mrs. Woody's jobs on her list for me to do is now done. I managed to turn this....
Back on the 30th September I pictured the beginning of a bridge over the tracks of my 00 gauge layout. I have started some more serious construction of this - it is the only way I will really see if it works visually on the layout.
Some of the main components of the bridge are the girders that support the road deck above the railway. To make these I had to make some judgement as to the size they should be. I am not a bridge engineer although I have worked with some in the past so my judgement is based upon a little knowledge and as it is a model if it is wrong it cannot hurt!
I started off getting a nice large sheet of 1mm thick plastic card from the WMD HQ Stores That was cut into 8mm strips about 18 inches long. I had decided that a scale 2 foot 6 inch deep by 2 foot wide girder would be the right dimensions. I had to get the strong solvent out to glue the plastic sheet as it is a robust plastic.