Now available. Just a quick question about the livery, the model has the cylinder covers painted lined black. Is this right? Looks well odd to me....
Jim
Its good to know where you stand. Saves making a fool of yourself later......
If that's an official picture of the production Railroad model, then, although it comes as no real surprise, it looks to me as if besides the better drive mechanism there is no improvement of any note over what was on offer in the eighties. I'm glad I obtained a Schools mechanism to try to fit under my detailed, renamed, old "Lincolnshire" body - that so called valve gear on 222 looks awful.
The panel on the cylinders should be green if you are trying to portray a Darlington paint job. which would I believe be standard on these locos pre WW2. A white edged black panel is exactly what Margate used to offer too. I mixed some Railmmatch Doncaster and Darlington greens together to match the Hornby body colour as best I could and painted in the patch, along with other areas that I had altered on loco and (in particular) the tender - which I turned into a stepped sided one.
Why Lincolnshire? My native county for a start, and the only D49 I know of that ever operated (albeit briefly) on the GN section.
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Morayshire as preserved has the wrong tender for the portrayed livery period, and whether the shade of the green paint is based on good evidence I do not know - but it is certainly very diffrent to the green on other preserved LNER locos. I think there is enough reason arising from those observations alone to create doubts about other aspects of authenticity, such as the lining. It would be better to look at period monochrome photos of clean D49s if you wish to see how much lining was applied, and I suspect the answer is far more than Hornby have bothered with.
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In the version of the image you have posted the size and definition is so limited that very little if any of the lining is properly visible, and the area around the cab front is in BLACK shadow! What evidence is that?
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blackout60800 wrote:Morayshire in 1929 at Eastfield, recently ex Darlington works
Morayshire Eastfield 1929.jpg
Lining seems to be the same
Lining would be black/white/white . The lining would follow the both cab edges, around the cab windows and the cab front below the roof.
Footplate, steps and tender should be lined in red.
I think the model is a waste of time and money, unless you want a cheap new basic loco .
The only thing that maybe useful? is the new chassis excluding the bogie even then new valve gear at a minimum.
Why have Hornby done a Hunt with a Shire chassis?? The tender is totally wrong as its the old tender drive model wrong size etc.
You would be better off buying a cheap body of ebay with a Comet chassis and e,g a Bachmann K3 tender
Atlantic 3279 wrote:
Why Lincolnshire? My native county for a start, and the only D49 I know of that ever operated (albeit briefly) on the GN section.
Yorkshire also operated briefly on the GN main line and was Driver Sparshatt's regular steed when she did. And that's MY home county!
The green comes from the oft-repeated myth that Darlington used a different green. Its the same colour Darlington repainted 4472 in 1969(?) which was mixed wrongly.
If I ain't here, I'm in Bilston, scoffing decent chips at last!!!!
It most sincerely, is not a myth. I've had the pleasure of talking to someone very much in the know, associated with the A1 Trust and the makeup of the two different paints is very different. He does in fact have samples of the original paint from each type, and it was his research that led to the paint being used on Tornado - try and guess which one of the two shades that is!
Don't forget that paint itself, by its very natural, varies from batch to batch but generally one shade of LNER green is darker than the other.
The Doncaster one is a case of "adding more yellow" apparently, in basic terms. I don't know the full ins and outs myself, so can't comment further, but I would suggest Malcolm Crawley of the Gresley Society is the best bet for the full facts.
Atlantic 3279 wrote:In the version of the image you have posted the size and definition is so limited that very little if any of the lining is properly visible, and the area around the cab front is in BLACK shadow! What evidence is that?
That photo isn't much help, but in the galleries section there's a picture from the Doncaster Plant open day (was it as long ago as 2003?) which shows that in preservation at least there is no lining at the cab/firebox join.