Christmas Day 2014

How life changes.  The boys, being bigger than us, now no longer expect us to put out presents from Father Christmas, and Andrew couldn’t believe that I put out carrots and a bowl of milk for Father Christmas’s reindeer last year ….

Presents can now arrive (wrapped) from on-line purchases arranged from Australian suppliers by people in England.  So, John and Mark, Thank You from the Australian Coulsheds, and here are pictures to show you what your presents looked like!

Small Christmas Day 01First the bowl from Peter’s of Kensington arrived wrapped like this:

 

 

Then these were the books and other presents:

Small Christmas Day 03Small Christmas Day 02Small Christmas Day 04

 

 

 

Small Christmas Day 05This is what the bowl looked like – excellent choice!

 

 

 

We had a large faily gathering here in Mount Riverview.  The Nicklins were particularly keen for us all to be together, and Nicola and Hamish are going far away this coming year, so this may be the last time we all gather together.

Small Christmas Day 07

L to R: Nicola Wallace, David Coulshed, Debbie Nicklin, Nick C, Claire N, Riley N, Robyn W, Margery N, Tony N, Malcolm N, Sue C, Anneka N, Lucy N, Hamish W, Andrew C and Richard W.

 

Model 8F Part 7: Cab re-construction

Following on from part 6, I found out from MOK (Dave Sharp) that I had definitely put the base of the cab on upside down.  This has all sorts of minor but annoying effects.  One was the fact that the formers inside the base of the cab had been made to accommodate the etched plates which were meant to go inside the curved sections (making them invisible – they are there only to make curving these areas easier).  So the formers made the curved plates have a larger diameter of curve – hence leaving a gap at the outer end: exactly where I had found one.

Small Cab reconstruction 002After much debate inside myself, I decided that I would never be happy if I did not do the job properly, so I pulled all the cab base apart using a 75 Watt soldering iron.  Once back to the component parts I tried to clean all the solder off the nickel-silver, then I flattened the bottom plate completely (apart from the front plate [see below]) first with my fingers, then with Small Cab reconstruction 003a tap hammer on a piece of flat granite.  The front plate (with three holes) is now bent upwards as it should be.

I then reformed the curves, fitted the formers back (now easier because the former correctly fitted onto the curved sections.  At the point shown in the picture, my soldering iron stopped working.  So I have sent off for a replacement.

Whilst I wait for a new 25 Watt soldering iron, here is a picture of the completed boiler backhead.

Small Backhead painted 1I am quite pleased with it.  Basically I followed what fittings I could see on photo.s of preserved and other engines, and then upt as many pipes as I could on the brass castings, to be realistic.  I “painted” it using metal blackener, scraped some off the copper pipes and painted the dials and water gauges by hand.  A thin covering of matt varnish to complete the work.

Thought for the day

This is a picture oNicks Med School Year Groupf about half of the students in the First Year at University Of Western Sydney Medical School.

In this picture there are about 16 European-background Australians, out of about 70 students.  Only about half the these come straight from school.

“Whities” just don’t work hard enough ….

Model 8F construction Part 6

I may have made a mistake, which has exposed a difficulty/problem with the etches, not related to ScaleSeven however.
Cab underfloor
The first picture shows the overall basic construction of the cab: there is an undefloor part which I guess if faithful to the protoytpe, but is completely hidden one the parts are put together!

Small Cab pictures 01 On the underneath of the cab is part no 362, which is curved upward to make the curved plates leading up to the footplate.

This shows that I may have put part number 362 on the wrong way up. I am guessing this because the three holes to take the damper levers have ended up on the wrong side. However putting it the other way up would mean that the fold for the panel at the front with three round gaps in it would be on the wrong side to bend it downwards – ie the bend would be away from the etched line. This is why I used it the way up which you can see in my pictures. Also the half-etched areas at the front on the curved plates I thought must be on the outside, because otherwise they would be completely hidden!
Small Cab pictures 02 So, if my analysis is correct, either the three holes for the damper levers are on the wrong side, or the etched line to fold the front plate is on the wrong side.
If you look at picture No.s 3 and 4, you can see that despite my care I have ended up with a gap between the cab-side etches and the curved part Small Cab pictures 03of part number 362.

On the right side this doesn’t matter, because if I push the curved part upwards, it neatly fits behind etch number 367 (this is the front of the cab, immediately behind the whitemetal firebox I think). This allows the shiny (unetched) strip at the side of the curved part on 362 to line up with the shiny strip along the lower edge of part number 367. Fine, it looks made to do just that. There will then be no gap along the bottom of the cab-side etch. The trouble is that on the left side, the curved part on 362 just abuts the thicker edge of part number 367 rather than going behind it, and leaves the curved part on 362 with a gap between that and the cab-side etch. This could be cured by removing a mm from the upper edge of part 362, but I’m reluctant to do that without knowing that it really needs to be done. Also with the assembly done so far, it will be awkward to do.  However advice from the Scale Seven fraternity on the Western Thunder website suggests that I have put the base on upside-down and the removing a mm from the curved part is therefore exactly what I will have to do.

Small Backhead 01

While I wait for the S7 wheels (for them to be sent to Aus., I want the whole lot at once, and I gather Slaters haven’t produced the pony truck wheels yet, although the others are ready), I have also been putting the details on the backhead.

It looks good so far, but it has been difficult to identify exactly where all the tiny lost-wax castings go.

I need to find views of the inside of an 8F cab, showing the backhead.  The “Locomotive Profiles” books have two, but one is of an oil-burner, and the other one doesn’t seem to have the same components as provided in my kit. Mostly it is the same, but some parts are seemingly missing from the kit (the one described in the book as the “independent steam valve”), and doesn’t appear to be a casting either for the “blowdown valve” or one which goes where the steam sanding valve should fit, between the left water glass and the brake handle. There is a casting which can be seen in my picture placed in position, but if fixed there it will obstruct the regulator handle.

The pictures that I found via Google images didn’t help.  Again I have turned to the WT website for help, and I am a little closer to answering my questions now.  Later versions of the 8F don’t have the sand gun control valves in the centre of the backhead, and there are some other little details which I will have to change.

More pictures when it is done ….

Update

It has been a while since I made an entry about us, as opposed to my model railway.

Well, aGymea Lilymongst other things we have finally had a Gymea Lily grow its flower in our back garden.  The plant has been there for the large part of a decade, but this year it grew a flower.  This flower is at the top of a 3 metre high stalk, which makes for a very sectacular display!

 

Nicklin-Coulshed grandchildrenOther occurrences of note are the grandparents wedding anniversary, celebrated at Sydney Yacht Squadron, where the younger grandchildren were present (Robyn and family couldn’t be there).

 

 

Also, I have a new office.  Not very exciting to anyone else, but it is a lot nicer than my old one, and a little bigger also.

Davids new office 1  Davids new office 2

 

 

 

Seen before and after I moved my stuff in.

David

Stanier 8F footplate modifications

I have to say that I feel a little foolish about this, but as a warning to others ….  See if you could/would have made the same error.

Footplate etch

Original Footplate etch

The frames of my model 8F in Scale Seven I have decided to make at 29mm outside width (see previous posts).  The nice etch of the main footplate made by Modern Outline Kits is for their Finescale construction, so the inside edges of the footplate would be too narrow for my model, and would hang over the insides of the frames.

Footplate etch with extra rivetsIt might not matter too much, but I thought this should be easily corrected, so I decided to re-form the line of rivets which runs parallel to the inside edge, then cut back the edge wherever it shows.  I don’t have a rivet-forming tool which can precisely measure out and positon the rivets, but by careful measuring and scratching marks on the underside of the footplate, I seem to have managed a reasonable job.  I also scratched on the footplate the width of the frames, ready to cut back the inside edges.

So far so good.  I thought.

Footplate modified

Footplate modified

Next I cut back the frame edges, carefully cutting (piercing saw)  and filing straight edges.

Trial fit to frames: mistake exposed: what width should I have made the distance across the inside edges of the footplate?

NOT 29mm!

It should have been 29mm less twice the thickness of the frames – 27.5mm.  So the footplate now ended just outside of the frames!  This would look even worse than the overhang which I had decided to remove.  What can I now do?

Footplate corrected.

Footplate corrected.

I found some 0.7mm nickel-silver wire which I had left over from a previous project, and carefully soldered it along the inside of the frames.  Look carefully at the last picture (click to enlarge any of the pictures) and you might be able to spot the differences!

Oh, well!

OK. John, you had your chance.

John and I have both posted entries about my recent visit to England.

These photo.s were in fact taken by John, but I will use them because he has not, a week later.

Small Mark and David on Dalegarth Station platform

 

First, a picture of mark and myself on Dalegarth Station.

I had just walked up to Burnmoor Tarn from Eskdale.  In the rain and wind: I was soaked.  It was a wonderful walk.  However an event occurred which made me feel old.  I was stopped by a young Indian-origin lady who was out walking on her own, and clearly a little lost.  She asked me where I was going, and was pleased to hear that I was heading for Burnmoor Tarn, as that was on her way over to Wasdale, where she was to meet someone, and she had started out then turned back when she realised that she didn’t know where she was.  Fine, I could help, and put her right.  I was walking a lot faster than her however, and met her on my way back from the tarn, and provided more guidance.  Only later did I realise that I was probably safe and reassurring for her to approach because I probably looked like some gnarled old man out for a walk on his home ground.  In some ways a regrettably accurate description, even if I now life in a different hemisphere!

Small David and the Black Five at Carlisle

The second picture was taken when John and I went for a ride behind a steam engine over the Settle-Carlisle Railway.

It was a great day out, through beautiful scenery.  What more need I say?

 

 

England, including l’Enclume on 23rd August

I have been to visit England again, a year since my last visit.  This time, for amusement, I went purely as an Australian – I did not use a British passport at any time.  Actually this was a spur-of-the-minute decision taken at Manchester airport when I arrived.  The queue for EU and British entrants was about half-an-hour long, whereas as an Australian I only had three people in front of me!

Small Station Hotel from the Rly Stn

 

I went straight up to Cark with Mark and John.  It really is a lovely place which they have there, as a retreat from Manchester and the South.

 

 

I did some fellwalking whilst I was there (walking up to Burnmoor Tarn, in between Eskdale and Wasdale), and took some friends to l’Enclume again (see my entry from 24th August last year).  L’Enclume was declared the Best Restaurant in the UK recently by the Good Food Guide.  Perhaps as a consequence the price had gone up by a third since last year!

Valley venison, charcoal, oil and mustard

Valley venison, charcoal, oil and mustard

White turnip, maran egg and nasturtium leaves

White turnip, maran egg and nasturtium leaves

Three Pea and Crab Sacks (the sacks are ceramic)

Three Pea and Crab Sacks (the sacks are ceramic)

Iced blueberries, sheeps' milk ice-cream and apple marigold

Iced blueberries, sheeps’ milk ice-cream and apple marigold

 

 

It was very good, again.

 

We had some lovely English sparkling wine: Nyetimber and Ridgeview, particularly the former. I even searched out these two afterwards.  Nyetimber is even sold in supermarkets.  Mark accompanied me to Ridgeview winery (they are both near to Mark’s house in Oxted).  They are expensive, however: even the very best sparkling wine in Australia (Arras Grand Vintage) cost significantly less.

I have to say that the event at l’Enclume was not quite the same, though. I guess it’s just that I had done it before and the surpirise and delight of the twenty courses was less.  £120 per head is also very expensive, even for 20 courses at the best restaurant in England.

I didn’t see several of the friends whom I would like to have visited: David and Amaryllis (on holiday in Italy), Steve and Christine (on duty and too busy), the Robinson family (just too little time).  I did get to see Tim Elsworth, who is living in London, and we had a very good day together.

Small The Cheshire Chees - Old Brewery BitterIt ended with an excellent indian meal and a pint of Samuel Smiths Old Brewery Bitter, in the Cheshire Cheese, a pub. on Fleet Street.

 

 

Small Mark on the TGV to BarcelonaMark and I then caught the Eurostar to Paris, followed by the TGV down to Barcelona (where I went to the European Cardiology Congress).

 

 

 

 

Barcelona was wonderful, again.  I think the combination of beautiful seafood, amazing buildings, vibrant culture, is hard to beat.  Mark, John and I stayed in an apartment hired for me to stay in during the conference, in the Old City part of Barcelona.  Mark and John went exploring whilst I went to the conference (which was very useful, and good).  We ate out in the evenings together.