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Space, The Final Frontier II …

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Last night I had the real privilege of meeting a hero, they, (whoever ‘they’ are), say you should never meet your hero’s for fear of disappointment, but this was a real pleasure.

Buckingham EM gauge

Buckingham EM gauge

The hero wasn’t a person, but a layout, Peter Denny’s Buckingham. The layout now in the custodianship of Tony Gee is being restored to working order, and from ‘playing trains’ last night its well on its way. Tony has written some of the story in the first edition of FRMR http://albionyard/thirty/ but when you see the challenge that Tony and his team of friends has overcome, it makes it all the more remarkable. Buckingham is unusual in that it portrays a railway, rather than as most UK layouts a station or single location served by fiddleyards or staging areas. This means that when playing trains, a train actually goes somewhere and does something tangible. Now many of the Canadian and US readers will be rolling their eyes at the ceiling at this point and saying Derr! It is though very different in the UK and  ‘location’ modelling is very much the standard, Fremo style exhibitions and modular meets not having gained any ground here. I’ve enjoyed myself operating many layouts over the years, but this was noticeably different, and has sparked an idea that has been gestating for quite a while.

For a while I’ve been at that point ‘between projects’ or ‘resting’ as our thespian luvvies would have it. I’ve a wide range of railway modelling interests, but only one life, so its time to focus again. Albion Yard still exists, mothballed. From the layout I have the scenery, buildings, trees, track and stock specific to the Forest of Dean. I’ve a good amount of hard copy analogue research data, and access to unpublished images too. I have similar for some other potential projects too, where in UK tradition I could make a layout of a location.

Enjoy it.

And then what?

Like Albion Yard, likely end up collecting dust while I do, or think of, something else. Last night may have been a milestone in how I model in the future. I like trains to ‘do something’, and Buckingham meets that criteria beautifully. Chris Nevard’s Buckminster Ironstone http://nevardmedia.railex-2014.html whilst only a ‘Y‘ as a track plan had something about it in addition to his beautiful modelling. Loading the wagons meant you ‘did something’ more than just run a train. And there really is something in that.

Wharfedale Road 4mm/OO scale

Wharfedale Road
4mm/OO scale

The project layout above, whilst good to look at and more interesting than an inglenook layout to operate, still acts as a simple in, shunt, out, layout. Which is ok for a while for me, but I want more functionality ( I think …). The DVD layouts appearance can be changed, it has a lighting rig that allows different  lighting, and has jigsaw components to swap out. In essence that’s it though.

Analogue Research

Analogue Research

Tom Foster http://tfmodelling.wordpress.com/ is working up his layout plans at the moment, and that was part of the kick start in thinking hard about what I want from my next project. The books above are part of that process, good old hard copy analogue works. There’s a lot of shite talked about you can get what you need from the internet. There is very little for me, even relatively recent times such as the 60’s where film and cameras were becoming far more common. Its true to say that images over the past few years have become more prevalent, but only in in some subject matters and more recent eras, but for many historical railway projects the internet is still a desert. So, out with the maps and books and signalling diagrams, and I should  make the obligatory reference to a mug of tea or glass of wine, it’s an internet railway modellers Godwins Law. The basic concept to see if I can make a modular layout representing Forest of Dean branchlines, with the operating ethos of Buckingham, and retaining the visual impact for me of the Forest area, and capturing the atmosphere which has worked so well with Albion Yard.

I’m fortunate in having a reasonable space that it may be possible to have four locations, including Serridge Junction, Whimsey, Acorn Patch, one of the collieries, maybe based on Eastern United or Princess Royal. Not copies but pastiches, LDE’s (layout design element) encompassing a series of 6ft x 18inch ‘Shelfies‘ to capture the areas portrayed, as eye level modules that can be exhibited separately ‘I-layouts’ as Chris Nevard, called them, or joined together to take an operating ‘railway’ to an exhibition. I’ve got the space, the final frontier is the dedication and motivation.

At the moment I’m on the horse looking at the distant ridge line, the horse is thinking ‘kinell’. I’m thinking, ‘can I cross that frontier?’

Dunno, stay tuned.

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* Layout Design Element see Tony Koester

 

 

 



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