Non-prototypical East Anglian layout.
Posted: Sun Oct 04, 2009 8:50 pm
My father, after years of procrastination and with retirement just around the corner, has finally decided to build his long talked-of model railway. He was a draughtsman and electrical engineer by trade, and I have no worries about his abilities to lay track and wire up power, points, locomotives, signals, lights and anything else required. Ditto the baseboards and scenic foundations - he built some podiums for a theatre group my sister was a member of which I have no doubt will last longer than anyone who has used them. He could proabably have a tidy sideline in retirement making baseboards for other people!
The one thing he lacks knowledge in, though, is rolling stock. I have volunteered to collaborate with him on this, but my last railway modelling efforts were back in my teens and they concentrated more on modern image. There are a few areas that I would therefore like to ask advice form the members of the board about:
1.) Layout
The layout itself is to be a continuous loop in OO and set in a fictional area of East Anglia in the second half of the 1950s, thereby allowing steam and the occasional diesel to co-exist. The setting will be hampered by the fact that the area available is only approximately 6'x4', which causes all manner of issues regarding the length of potential platform length and the resulting length of train it is possible to run. There is also an issue with the way the layout will be mounted, since it will be surrounded by walls on three sides, meaning that the 'display' side and the 'operating' side will both be on the 'front' edge, if you see what I mean.
This means that there is no way of having a hidden fiddle yard at the 'back' of the layout, as there will be no way of getting to it or seeing what train you are picking out to run next. I have been thinking about this and was wondering if it would be possible in the space available to have some kind of ramp system leading down to a second loop on a lower level? This way would allow the main focal points of the layout and a fiddle yard to both be at the 'front' of the layout at the same time, with the former above the latter. I realise that the layout would have to be higher than is probably normal, to allow for comfortable access to the lower level, that there would probably have to be some fairly elaborate carpentry around the ramps and that the confined space might mean that the ramps would have to be quite steep, but if anyone has any ideas on whether this might be possible or any experience of operating a split-level layout in this way then I would be interested in hearing them. Train lengths would probably be quite short, for the reasons already explained, and the ramps themselves could be hidden behind a scenic device, as fiddle yards often are. I have seen examples of layouts that have used ramps to lower levels for fiddle yard access, but these have all been considerably bigger, and I am just wondering if it is theoretically possible in such a small space.
The visible part of the layout will probably include a rural station and a small goods yard, possibly with a cattle dock or coal drops, depending on what there is space for. My parents live in Bury St. Edmunds, and the local station would be a lovely project for someone if the old links to Thetford and Sudbury and the former 'through express' lines between the platforms could be included, but it is probably too big for the space available. Something representative of this area would probably be ideal, though, since the position on the Ipswich-Cambridge line would allow dual track running and a steady flow of both passenger and freight traffic, although I am am guessing there would not have been huge Pacifics running enormous 12-car trains, which we have room to run or store. Which brings us to...
2.) Stock
I have started looking for likely locomotives, beginning with a rather charming 1960 copy of The Observer's Book of Railway Locomotives of Britain, which I picked up off eBay for a few quid, and in which a previous owner has occasionally noted fifty-year-old train numbers! This may not be very detailed, and does not go very deeply into allocations, but it does at least suggest which parts of the country different engines usually lived in. From it I have come up with a list of possible available locomotives:
Y1/Y3 Sentinel (Nu-Cast kit)
J67/J69 0-6-0T(Connoisseur, SE Finecast, DJH, London Road)
J68 0-6-0T (Connoiseur, London Road)
J94 0-6-0T (Hornby)
J15 0-6-0 (Alan Gibson, Nu-Cast)
J17 0-6-0 (PDK, Crownline)
J19 0-6-0 (PDK)
J20 0-6-0 (PDK, Crownline, McGowan)
J39 0-6-0 (Bachmann)
N7 0-6-2T (Various)
2-MT 2-6-0 (Bachmann)
4-MT 2-6-0 (Bachmann)
K1/K2 2-6-0 (Nu-Cast, London Road)
B1 4-6-0 (Bachmann)
B17 4-6-0 (Hornby)
WD/O7 2-8-0 (Bachmann)
I have culled this list partly from the aforementioned Observer book and partly from other sources, but my knowledge is obviously limited and if anyone has any suggestions for engines that are not on the list, or for ones which are on the list and shouldn't be, I would be glad of the guidance. I am not suggesting gathering examples of all of the above, since it will only be a small layout and we could not possibly use all of them. The small dimensions would also favour the smaller locos on the list, although there may be room for one or more of the larger ones.
I have also never kit-built a locomotive before, and would appreciate any advice on this. If anyone has any experience of building any of the above kits, or has any particular recommendations for a beginner, then I would be equally pleased to hear them. I am considering starting with a Sentinel, partly because I like them and partly because I am hoping that the blocky shape and the fact that it runs on a motor bogie rather than a kit-built chassis will make it easier for a first project.
Of course, it is entirely possible to create an excuse to run pretty much anything on your own layout, whether there is precedent or not. I would very much like to think up a reason to run a very much out of area ex-LMS Bachmann 'Super D' 0-8-0, just because I happen to like them. An excuse will also have to be found to run the Hornby Flying Scotsman in LNER Apple Green that Mum bought Dad for his birthday! So close, but neither of us had the heart to tell her...
Finally, does anybody know of any books which depict ex-Private Owner wagons in early BR use? I have read about the wartime pooling of Private Owner coal wagons and their subsequent nationalisation and have heard that some lasted up until withdrawal in the early 1960 still carrying their original signage, albeit heavily weathered and with the addition of BR 'Pxxxxxxx' numbers. One detail I had considered adding to the layout was a small rake of ex-PO wagons standing in a tucked away siding, forlornly waiting for their last trip to the breaker's yard. I thought of this as I have bought a few 2nd hand PO wagons from eBay in order to practice my weathering skills before the layout is built, and it would be a shame to waste them!
I am seeing my Dad next weekend and he has promised to take me out for a beer to discuss 'the layout'. I just hope I have enough ideas by then to justify the tab!
Thanks for reading.
The one thing he lacks knowledge in, though, is rolling stock. I have volunteered to collaborate with him on this, but my last railway modelling efforts were back in my teens and they concentrated more on modern image. There are a few areas that I would therefore like to ask advice form the members of the board about:
1.) Layout
The layout itself is to be a continuous loop in OO and set in a fictional area of East Anglia in the second half of the 1950s, thereby allowing steam and the occasional diesel to co-exist. The setting will be hampered by the fact that the area available is only approximately 6'x4', which causes all manner of issues regarding the length of potential platform length and the resulting length of train it is possible to run. There is also an issue with the way the layout will be mounted, since it will be surrounded by walls on three sides, meaning that the 'display' side and the 'operating' side will both be on the 'front' edge, if you see what I mean.
This means that there is no way of having a hidden fiddle yard at the 'back' of the layout, as there will be no way of getting to it or seeing what train you are picking out to run next. I have been thinking about this and was wondering if it would be possible in the space available to have some kind of ramp system leading down to a second loop on a lower level? This way would allow the main focal points of the layout and a fiddle yard to both be at the 'front' of the layout at the same time, with the former above the latter. I realise that the layout would have to be higher than is probably normal, to allow for comfortable access to the lower level, that there would probably have to be some fairly elaborate carpentry around the ramps and that the confined space might mean that the ramps would have to be quite steep, but if anyone has any ideas on whether this might be possible or any experience of operating a split-level layout in this way then I would be interested in hearing them. Train lengths would probably be quite short, for the reasons already explained, and the ramps themselves could be hidden behind a scenic device, as fiddle yards often are. I have seen examples of layouts that have used ramps to lower levels for fiddle yard access, but these have all been considerably bigger, and I am just wondering if it is theoretically possible in such a small space.
The visible part of the layout will probably include a rural station and a small goods yard, possibly with a cattle dock or coal drops, depending on what there is space for. My parents live in Bury St. Edmunds, and the local station would be a lovely project for someone if the old links to Thetford and Sudbury and the former 'through express' lines between the platforms could be included, but it is probably too big for the space available. Something representative of this area would probably be ideal, though, since the position on the Ipswich-Cambridge line would allow dual track running and a steady flow of both passenger and freight traffic, although I am am guessing there would not have been huge Pacifics running enormous 12-car trains, which we have room to run or store. Which brings us to...
2.) Stock
I have started looking for likely locomotives, beginning with a rather charming 1960 copy of The Observer's Book of Railway Locomotives of Britain, which I picked up off eBay for a few quid, and in which a previous owner has occasionally noted fifty-year-old train numbers! This may not be very detailed, and does not go very deeply into allocations, but it does at least suggest which parts of the country different engines usually lived in. From it I have come up with a list of possible available locomotives:
Y1/Y3 Sentinel (Nu-Cast kit)
J67/J69 0-6-0T(Connoisseur, SE Finecast, DJH, London Road)
J68 0-6-0T (Connoiseur, London Road)
J94 0-6-0T (Hornby)
J15 0-6-0 (Alan Gibson, Nu-Cast)
J17 0-6-0 (PDK, Crownline)
J19 0-6-0 (PDK)
J20 0-6-0 (PDK, Crownline, McGowan)
J39 0-6-0 (Bachmann)
N7 0-6-2T (Various)
2-MT 2-6-0 (Bachmann)
4-MT 2-6-0 (Bachmann)
K1/K2 2-6-0 (Nu-Cast, London Road)
B1 4-6-0 (Bachmann)
B17 4-6-0 (Hornby)
WD/O7 2-8-0 (Bachmann)
I have culled this list partly from the aforementioned Observer book and partly from other sources, but my knowledge is obviously limited and if anyone has any suggestions for engines that are not on the list, or for ones which are on the list and shouldn't be, I would be glad of the guidance. I am not suggesting gathering examples of all of the above, since it will only be a small layout and we could not possibly use all of them. The small dimensions would also favour the smaller locos on the list, although there may be room for one or more of the larger ones.
I have also never kit-built a locomotive before, and would appreciate any advice on this. If anyone has any experience of building any of the above kits, or has any particular recommendations for a beginner, then I would be equally pleased to hear them. I am considering starting with a Sentinel, partly because I like them and partly because I am hoping that the blocky shape and the fact that it runs on a motor bogie rather than a kit-built chassis will make it easier for a first project.
Of course, it is entirely possible to create an excuse to run pretty much anything on your own layout, whether there is precedent or not. I would very much like to think up a reason to run a very much out of area ex-LMS Bachmann 'Super D' 0-8-0, just because I happen to like them. An excuse will also have to be found to run the Hornby Flying Scotsman in LNER Apple Green that Mum bought Dad for his birthday! So close, but neither of us had the heart to tell her...
Finally, does anybody know of any books which depict ex-Private Owner wagons in early BR use? I have read about the wartime pooling of Private Owner coal wagons and their subsequent nationalisation and have heard that some lasted up until withdrawal in the early 1960 still carrying their original signage, albeit heavily weathered and with the addition of BR 'Pxxxxxxx' numbers. One detail I had considered adding to the layout was a small rake of ex-PO wagons standing in a tucked away siding, forlornly waiting for their last trip to the breaker's yard. I thought of this as I have bought a few 2nd hand PO wagons from eBay in order to practice my weathering skills before the layout is built, and it would be a shame to waste them!
I am seeing my Dad next weekend and he has promised to take me out for a beer to discuss 'the layout'. I just hope I have enough ideas by then to justify the tab!
Thanks for reading.