HO Dounreay - a Far North micro terminus in H0

cloggydog

Western Thunderer
The (fictional but quite plausible) History
Built at the turn of the 20th Century by the Highland Railway to serve the small fishing town of Dounreay (rather like the similar and actually built branch to Lybster on the Wick line), a single-track branch diverging off the mainline at Georgemas Junction and heading roughly west-north-west for the 10 miles or so to Dounreay via Halkirk, Forsie and Shebster.

The line was retained during WW2 to serve RAF Coastal Command’s Dounreay airfield, which was then taken over post-war by the UK Atomic Energy Authority and the MoD for a joint facility to develop and test experimental nuclear reactor technology for civilian and Naval use. This meant that traffic levels remained high enough through base staff transfers and construction materials, in addition to the existing local traffic, to retain the branch at least into the late-1960s and early-1970s, when the layout is set.

The Model
Dounreay is the third micro I've done using the Ikea Lack 110cm x 26cm shelf as a baseboard. By no means original (see the lovely work by that sheep bloke ;) ) but they provide a cheap, rigid and lightish baseboard.

A 4mm ply display box (ends, back and window fascia) are glued and pinned to the Lack and incorporate integral lighting using LED strip.

Trackwork is Peco Code 75, laid onto black 2mm eva foam sheet (under a tenner for 50 A4 sheets on ebay) with simple wire-in-tube operation. No wiring on the scenic boards, it's all fed from the plug-in fiddlestick. Control is dc analogue from a Gaugemaster HH.

Platforms are 12mm square stripwood sides with 1mm card platform surface.

The walls of the station building are layers of 2mm greyboard and the roof structure is 5mm balsa strip. The overbridge is a cut-down girder from Heljan.

Extensive use is made of Slaters Dressed Stone embossed plasticard sheet for the platform facings, retaining wall, station building and bridge abutments. Sprayed light grey primer from a rattle can, then 'painted' using colour pencils.

The Highland Railway cabin and the yard bothy are scratchbuilt in plasticard. The rest is just detailing and weathering.

As with all my micros, portability is key. I don't drive, so exhibitions are done via public transport, requiring things like support stands to fold flat and a large duffel bag to keep the layout protected in transit. Stockboxes in a suitable bag, everything else in a small backpack.

All I need is a 6ft table, which most venues have, and a couple of chairs. Front operated, best viewed (and operated) seated. Why stand all day when you can sit :)

Dounreay 1.jpg Dounreay box.jpgDounreay roof 1.jpgIMG_20201017_164323.jpgIMG_20201019_221905.jpgIMG_20230216_083118.jpgIMG_20230618_095429.jpgIMG_20231028_080007.jpg
 
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cloggydog

Western Thunderer
There is a backscene, a google streetview screenshot of the place, converted to fit 6 x landscape A4 pages using the free Posteriza web-based app and printed on the home laser printer. Took a couple of goes to get right, but does nail the location down quite well. IMG_20230618_095440.jpgAt exhibitions, I use a Tim Horn display stand to support the fiddlestick and keep the stock on display. The layout sits on 2 folding ply risers to match the display stand height. These slot into battens under the board to keep them stable. A velcroed skirt hides the usual detritus.IMG_20230410_173532.jpg
 

Jordan or Plymouth Mad

Mid-Western Thunderer
I saw this in The Dispatch, Ian Holmes' micro layouts e-magazine. Really liked it, and it was also interesting scale-wise, having had a tinker in British HO myself many years ago. :thumbs:
 

cloggydog

Western Thunderer
Dounreay is out, for the last time this year, on Saturday 2nd Nov at the Newbury Club's exhibition in St Bartholomew's School.



Geoff Helliwell recently photographed the layout for it's upcoming feature in Railway Modeller, expected to be in the March 2025 issue, to tie in with Model Rail Scotland, where the layout will have it's first showing of 2025.
 
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cloggydog

Western Thunderer
Newbury show went well, with just a minor issue during set-up when my 4-way extension failed the PAT, luckily the Newbury club had spares so all good.

Had quite a few interesting chats about British H0 scale modelling with visitors and the layout was well received. Around noon a young lad named Isaac (age 8 or 9), with mum & dad in tow, took a keen interest in the layout, so was handed the controller and, after a quick instruction on point operation, etc, took over the driving for about 90 minutes! A couple of other youngsters also had a go and were mostly quick to get to grips with running the trains very smoothly.

Around 3pm, young Isaac came back for another go and operated pretty much through to closing time! Dounreay has never had so frequent a passenger service!

The show was pretty busy throughout the day, lots of families enjoying a good selection of very nice layouts.

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cloggydog

Western Thunderer
Had confirmation that Dounreay will be in the March 2025 issue of Railway Modeller, due out next week.



The layout is set-up on the bench at the mo for some titivation, minor repairs and a full check ahead of Model Rail Scotland in under a fortnight (Stand A40, behind Accurascale)

I made up some decals for the Transit, to recognise the sadly-missed friend who inspired Dounreay. And I figured out that the NEM pocket extenders included with Accurascale's new 16t mins would make fish boxes for H0, so a bunch have been painted up and fixed in place.
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The old EKO Austin van has finally got it's new paintjob, decals from Black Square Decals (intended to replace those on an old diecast toy van).
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And a bunch of new stock is being finished and weathered, some vans, some (more) NPCCS and a scratchbuilt lowmac.
 

Lacathedrale

New Member
Does the fiddle stick pivot on that supporting display unit for connection with the other roads? How long is the fiddlestick, please?

I'm thinking of a small micro myself and have heard of the ovine use of Lack, but I'm not sure how you'd get the sides and back on like you have, it being hollow - what did you do to affix them?
 
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cloggydog

Western Thunderer
Does the fiddle stick pivot on that supporting display unit for connection with the other roads? How long is the fiddlestick, please?

I'm thinking of a small micro myself and have heard of the ovine use of Lack, but I'm not sure how you'd get the sides and back on like you have, it being hollow - what did you do to affix them?
The fiddlestick is 800cm long and is not attached to the display stand via a pivot or other fitting, just resting on the top shelf. It has rail joiners soldered to the layout end and is simply pushed onto whichever of the 3 layout roads is required. As the fiddlestick is connected to the controller, the whole layout is electrically dead no wiring at all) until the fiddlestock is attached to a road.

IMG_20230216_083118.jpg

The internal construction of a Lack has full-length beams of 1cm thick chipwood down both sides the full 5cm height. At the ends there are 2 layers of the same, interlocking with the side beams. Top/bottom surfaces are 2mm plasticised veneer.

So there is enough 'meat' in the sides/ends to take pins, screws, pattern-makers dowels and over-centre catches to 'multi-up' 2 or more Lacks together for a sectional/modular layout. IMG_20220919_112628.jpgIMG_20230501_174121.jpgIMG_20220909_123907.jpg

The rear (wall) face does have a recess for the metal bracket to sit in, so only the c20cm at either end is usable, unless you infill the recess with ply/stripwood.

Hth
 

cloggydog

Western Thunderer
The trip to Glasgow went well (despite the WCML's best efforts*) with lots of positive feedback from folk who either worked at Dounreay or lived in Wick, Thurso or the surrounding area. Some useful info gleaned from their reminiscing too, which has sparked a couple of additional stock ideas. According to 2 separate conversations, TPOs weren't unknown at Wick in the era modelled, so a Playcraft mail coach is now in the stash for reworking/correcting and I really must crack on with the oil tankers.

*90+ late into Glasgow on the Thursday, then 30+ late departing Glasgow on the Monday and no chance of delay repay as I used my last couple of rail staff free boxes to get there and back...

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My glamorous assistant David Alexander brought along his superbly-reworked Playcraft NBL Type 2 (Class 29) to give some variety to my Derby Twos. Just hope I can get mine to look as good.

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He also had a Lima Deltic which had been reduced very effectively to H0. Sadly for him (but happily for me, given my general dislike of the rancid over-engineered bilious things ), it was too long for the headshunt, so only had a few turns.

Quite a few visitors also referenced the RM article, notably how much smaller the layout was in the flesh!

I can say I've got out of drinking practice, the 4 nights in various 'spoons on the darker ales took a slight toll on operator performance... Good craic with a bunch of friends also exhibiting with various layouts, though.

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How many trains?!

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Dounreay's next outing is to the Wealden Group's shindig in Steyning on Sunday 9th March, then the Astolat Club's exhibition in Guildford on the 29th June.
 
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Jordan or Plymouth Mad

Mid-Western Thunderer
My glamorous assistant David Alexander brought along his superbly-reworked Playcraft NBL Type 2 (Class 29) to give some variety to my Derby Twos. Just hope I can get mine to look as good.
I had one of those & tried to re-work it into a D63xx, on a Mehano chassis. I do have a photo of the never-finished model, but won't embarass myself more than usual by posting it. :oops:


a Lima Deltic which had been reduced very effectively to H0. ....... (but happily for me, given my general dislike of the rancid over-engineered bilious things)
:eek: Wow!! You can go off people, y'know..... :confused: :p ;) :))
 
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