With Christmas paraphernalia still occupying the space that I usually steal when doing my model making, but with the desire to get on with something earlier this week, I made the mistake of thinking that I was going to do a quick job with minimal tools to turn a basically tidy passenger brake van model with unsuitable bogies into an additional useful vehicle with compatibility with several types of couplings.
In addition to all of those goods vehicles that were given to me by a very kind friend and which I made fit for service in readiness for the Little Bytham 1930s weekends last Summer, I also received another Ian Kirk non-gangwayed full brake sitting on Margate BR Mk1 bogies, so it seemed obvious that I should swap to a set of home-cast resin Fox bogies. So I did:
I hit trouble as soon as I tried to meddle with the original builder's chosen bogie mounting screws. These were 8BA brass machine screws, driven through the van floor with the heads on the inside, glue-locked nuts under the bogies, and the van roof very solidly glued on. The nuts released easily enough, but a quick trial showed that the screws wouldn't be long enough to suit the thicker bolsters of the new bogies unless I counter-bored the latter to accommodate the nuts. As the guard's windows were not glazed, I thought I would simply wind the screws out, initially by turning them with pliers and then by slotting their ends and continuing with a screwdriver, before tipping them out through the window apertures. I could then put longer screws in from below. Of course, the first screw I tackled broke off instead of turning, leaving me to try to centre-pop the remains and drill same out accurately without chewing out a large, off-centre hole in the plastic. After suitable swearing and two or three attempts both to plug the enlarged hole in the plastic and then to re-drill it in the right place to a viable tapping size, the novelty of this simple upgrade had thoroughly worn off. I had also detected several hidden part-height partitions built in to the bodyshell that made it very difficult to shake any debris towards the open guard's windows....
It seemed like a good idea to leave the second bogie screw alone and accommodate the nut in the thickness of the new bolster!
I also decided to cut out some of the floor to give me better ability to extract and debris from within and to insert some glazing into the main windows.
You'll notice that the underframe fittings are of the minimalist school. I won't be doing anything about those just yet.
I've built some NEM plug-in type coupling pockets onto the bogies and added scale drawhooks too.
The roof could do with some decent ventilators.
In looking at the suitability or otherwise of the builder's original choice of number, in the lists in the Harris LNER carriages book (the one with a partly blue cover) I started to think that I'll soon have nearly as many of these vehicles as the LNER did (okay, slight exaggeration), especially if the style of the model is correct only for dia. 129 (25 vans built at York 1928-1937) and its dia.284 successor (5 built at York 1939), but I noticed that there was an earlier van of the same size, dia.67, another nine of which were apparently built at Dukinfield in 1926-7. A later look at Diagrams in Harris's "Gresley Standard etc." volume suggested the same panelling on the d.67s save for their lack of a ducket, which my latest model also lacks, so it may well end up as a d.67. I now notice that one of my two existing examples with a d.129 No also lacks the ducket it should have. O bother!!
There's also a bit of a colour problem comparing the new example to the general trend of my other teak coaches....
A coat or two of brown-tinted varnish beckons....