Sunday 30 October 2016

Rain rain go away....

It's day time and dark and pouring with rain outside here in Campbeltown at the moment, so time to post a report.

Not a huge amount of work over the past week. Other things have got in the way.

I have been doing a little scenery work on Barra Town and testing some ideas I have about ballasting and weathering the track.

Also got out some of my N scale houses etc and started lining them up to see which arrangement looks best so that I can start marking the roads.



 The two paper towel tubes are marking where a grain silo might be located, though on the original Coonabarabran this is where a stock yard is/was situated.

This is the pilot model for the grain silo which is planned to be released by new manufacturer Meerkat Models in the not too distant future and displayed at the Liverpool Exhibition in October, so I'm hoping to grab a kit when they're available.

You can access Meerkat facebook at  https://www.facebook.com/MeerkatModels/

Another pleasant surprise at Liverpool was a sneek preview of Gopher Models 44 class.

This is the reverse livery. Phil Badger reckons they'll be available just before Christmas.

There has been little obvious work on my other layout Ga Hong Ha because I've been updating the wiring with my new Aldi soldering Iron as well as working on a couple of pieces of rolling stock. I've been scrachbuilding the same two vehicles for what seems like forever. About time I finished them.


This is a Vietnam Railways 50 foot bogie boxcar I'm working on. Big for metre gauge don't you think! I'm told the Vietnam metre gauge loading gauge is much bigger than some others, a good decision made by the French many years ago.

I've decided to learn how to etch the small parts because my eyes are not as good as they used to be.

The rain seems to have almost stopped and my wife has come home, so I'll see you again next time.

David



Friday 21 October 2016

"I've been working on the Railroad"


My wife took this photo of me working on the railroad. I'm working on my "Ga Hong Ha" N scale layout.

My wife is from Vietnam. We travel there from Sydney nearly every year and while we're there I usually visit, travel on and admire the Vietnam National Railways (Duong Sat Viet Nam). Unlike most of the railways in Australia, which have been dismembered and in a mad rush to privatise everything, Vietnam Railways is still very much a complete 'railway' in the old sense, it runs passenger and freight trains and is run as a vertically integrated system, even if most of it is metre gauge and even if some parts are partially privatised or at least run as separate units within the overall system.



So it was natural that I attempt to build a layout based on what I saw. Hence my layout "Ga Hong Ha" or Hong Ha Station based on 'Ga Thap Cham' a station near to where my wife's family lives.

After some thought I chose Japanese N scale 1:150 so that I could, as Japanese modellers do, use 9 mm track to represent slightly narrow gauge and so that I could use standard Japanese N Scale models and accessories. I did think of using 6mm track (Z scale) but the rolling stock and chassis were very limited at the time and very expensive.








Photos: 1. Cham Monuments bought in a tourist shop near Phan Rang Station. 2. People's Committee (local Government) building 3. Scratchbuilt "Co-oP Supermarket 4. Ga Hong Ha (Hong Ha Station)  5. Police waiting for a traveller off the Re-unification Express due in from Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon).

If I were starting again I feel that I might try 1:120 (known in NZ as NZ120) sort of TT with 9 mm track which would make it correct and I could still use N Scale chassis and bogies as the New Zealanders do, but I've probably gone too far now.

It's been a long slow process, a lot has to be scratchbuilt but I feel that I'm getting there. I am pretty sure that I have the only relatively complete Vietnamese model railway in the world. There are some modellers in Vietnam but no complete layouts and they tend to model an eclectic assortment of US, British and European prototypes.

The layout is basically a partly folded loop with a main station and yard, Vietnam style It measures about 8 ft by 5 ft (2400 mm x 1500 mm) and it's not designed to be moved though it is made up of several sections. It lives in a spare bedroom along with my small workbench.

My other problem was that I didn't know very much about Vietnam railways so as well as building the layout a lot of research has been required. The result of my research is my website Railways in Vietnam  which has been in existence since 2009.

My locomotives and rolling stock are still very limited, something I need to do something about in the near future.

Of course while I was involved in all this I just didn't have the time to build a NSW layout despite having locomotives and rolling stock to do so.

Now that I have retired I find that I have a bit more time to work on two layouts so my new "Barra Town" is being built in the garage.

It will consist of a station and yard based loosely on the facilities that used to exist at Coonabaraban in NSW.  I was fortunate to find a lot of photos and drawings on the internet as well as two videos so I have a pretty good idea of the "look" despite never having been there.

On the other side of the layout will be a coal mine and facilities.


The layout is being built on a single board 6  ft by 3 ft (1800mm x 900mm), so it arguably isn't too large to transport to an exhibition one day.

Both of my layouts use traditional DC control. I'd like to have a go at DCC one day but it is expensive and I haven't quite grasped the fundamentals yet.

All the track, a mixture of PECO streamline and Setrack is laid on Barra Town and I'm just starting ballasting and a bit of scenery. I'll post some more photos in the next few days to show how it's going.

Until next time...

David

PS: Update: i noticed I uploaded the same two images of Barra Town as in the previous post, I've replaced them with two others.

Monday 17 October 2016

G'day.....

Welcome to my new blog.

I've been involved in the hobby of model railways off and on for what seems like forever, my first model train being a clockwork set when I was a about 5 or 6 years old.

Currently I am building two layouts, both in N Scale.

The first I have been building for some time and is based on the Railways of Vietnam. It's called "Ga Hong Ha" (Hong Ha Station) and is being built to Japanese N Scale (1:150) standards. This makes the track slightly narrow gauge to represent Vietnamese metre gauge. I culd have used Z scaletrack (6mm) but this would have really restricted the motive power I could use. Why the Railways of Vietnam (Duong Sat Viet Nam)? Because my wife comes from their and I've become quite passionate about the railways of that country.

The second, "Barra Town" is quite new and early in it's life cycle. It will represent a typical NSW country station and town based loosely on Coonabarraban. It's being built in Australian N scale (1:160) so I will have somewhere to run my 48 classes, my Frate-N locomotives and my Aust-N-Rail and Peter Boorman rolling stock.


 Below are a couple of photos of my Vietnamese layout:






 As I said my NSW layout is still just at the beginning but here are a couple of photos to give you an idea of where I'm heading:


 As you can see everything on Barra Town is still a bit of a mess. Lucky I've retired so I've got the time to work on both!

More next time......

David