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18 results found for 'Mick Moore'
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A Brace of Crabs
Issue 190 (2009)
p.113
4mm
Mick Moore uses the DJH kit as the basis for building a pair of LMS Crabs in the days before Bachmann introduced their model.
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Container wagons in 4mm scale
Issue 177 (2007)
p.237
4mm
Don't sell those old Airfix container wagons on eBay, says Mick Moore. With a new chassis and correctly modelled chains and shackles, they could be the basis of a stunning finescale upgrade.
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Early LMS Brake Vans for EM
Issue 224 (2013)
p.176
4mm/EM
With a choice of two LMS brake van kits available from Parkside Dundas, Mick Moore has taken a look at both, and meticulously refined and assembled eight of them to complete his collection of goods trains.
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Graded Coal for Wagonload Traffic
Issue 144 (2003)
p.197
Mick Moore shows how to model more realistic coal trains.
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Hest Bank gallows signals
Issue 180 (2008)
p.33
4mm
Mick Moore rises to the challenge of building a working 4mm scale model of this unusual prototype.
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Kit-built LMS 8F in EM
Issue 108 (1999)
p.3
4mm/EM
This is a tale of adding further detail to a popular kit.
DJH kit
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LMS 12-ton Covered Goods Vans
Issue 205 (2011)
p.60
4mm
In 1934 the LMS introduced a new covered goods van. From this prototype several diagram variations were made during the thirties and forties, and these can be modelled from the long established Ratio kit. LMS modeller Mick Moore, whose work has frequently appeared in the pages of MRJ, set about exploring the possibilities. He found that he could build unfitted Diagram 1897, and vacuum-fitted Diagram 1891 from the parts, and if he pitched his period during the mid 1930s, he could model wagons painted before and after the 1936 livery changes when LMS grey was replaced with bauxite on goods wagons.
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Marking out a hole
Issue 205 (2011)
p.56
Mick Moore describes a more accurate way of marking out a hole on metal.
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Midland Buffer Stops in 4mm
Issue 121 (2000)
p.229
4mm
Mick Moore scratchbuilds 4mm Midland buffer stops
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Sharpening Stones
Issue 220 (2013)
p.3
Having found needle files too rough to clean up fine frets, Mick Moore discovered sharpening stones, which he has since found to be ideal for preparing many parts of both etched brass and plastic kits.