Interested to see what you do with the tarp, James. I wasn't really satisfied with my own efforts on a china clay wagon.
Next steps...
View attachment 246276
First unit assembled.
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I'm making them rigid, despite my liking for springing in P4 I'm looking long term and keeping things simple.
It's an Ambis etch via Hobby Holidays -What's the source of the etch please?
Interested to see what you do with the tarp, James. I wasn't really satisfied with my own efforts on a china clay wagon.




Thanks James. That’s very interesting, as it’s more-or-less what I did here, having never seen the MRJ article you referenced!First step wrap the wagon in cling film a la Gravett. My wife helped me today as I'm having a bit of a wobbly day today
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Apply PVA soaked newspaper strips; four 40mm x 140mm strips and one 30mm x 140mm strip for the top.
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Leave to sit for a little while and then the ends can manipulated to shape.
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Now to leave it a few days to dry.
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Thanks James. That’s very interesting, as it’s more-or-less what I did here, having never seen the MRJ article you referenced!
Newspaper sounds like a better choice than the tissue paper I used, which shrank as it dried.
First step wrap the wagon in cling film a la Gravett. My wife helped me today as I'm having a bit of a wobbly day today
View attachment 246316
Apply PVA soaked newspaper strips; four 40mm x 140mm strips and one 30mm x 140mm strip for the top.
View attachment 246317
Leave to sit for a little while and then the ends can manipulated to shape.
View attachment 246318
Now to leave it a few days to dry.
View attachment 246320
It works out a maximum of two strips thick following Martyn Welch's dimensions/widths.So, are there 2x strips on each sloping side and then the narrower stop on the top? Making the sloping sides 2 strips thick and the top 3 thick??
Why not a single piece, say scale 14 x 21 feet, and if that’s too floppy, double up? Why do it in panels?
Thanks James, I guess they didn’t use broadloom fabrics in that case.It replicates the panels seen on traditional wagon sheets and I think two thicknesses will aid handling; when off the wagon they're very fragile.
Thanks James, the ICC website agrees with 11x21 for later sheets, and suggests 14x21 for earlier ones. 11 feet would stitch up quite nicely from two 6 foot panels, but the seam would coincide with the sheet rail, that said, I guess it would be doubled just in the right place.Hi Simon,
A bit of searching suggests 11' x 21' as BR's standard size sheet, pre air brake LWB wagons.
The 40mm width comes from Martyn Welch's article, how it might relate to the prototype I've no idea! But the visible joins are in around the right places![]()


