Wasn't me.
T'was MarkR (no relation as far as I know)
T'was indeed me! We passed it many times on our way to RailWells, I wish I'd taken a few pictures, I think last time we saw it, it had changed considerably. Somerton is a very pleasant place, a bit "Miss Marpleish" as we say!Wasn't me.
T'was MarkR (no relation as far as I know)
I’m sure I remember that…
If you didn't want to make up a jig for the Bridgwater double roman tiles have a look at the Redutex texture sheets as the have a range of tile types in various scales.
The one labeled Mechanical Tile may be the one you're looking for.
Self-adhesive 3D texture sheets for scale models H0 and 00
Realistic roof tile textures, suitable for scales: 1: 100, 1:87, 1:76 and 1:64redutex.com
I don't know if this is any help? From the excellent MRJ Index on here.
Pantiles for Pendon
Malcolm Smith
Issue 47 (1991) p.131 4mm
Malcolm Smith rises to a challenge presented by Pendon Museum - 4mm scale pantiles of the 'double Roman' variety.
There are several others too
I managed to find a supplier on eBay for an acceptable double Roman tile. Came from China. I’ve used them on both the goods shed and train shed roofs at Cheddar. They may be a bit on the large size but there was no way on earth I was going to make them by hand!I’ve been fettling roof details on the dairy intake building and the adjoining representation of part of the processing plant. Some of this is simple enough, a start on the down pipes, guttering and flashing. The guttering is a strip of 60 thou’ rounded along the front edge - must add the brackets - with a few Modelu components (more needed!).
View attachment 219045
More complex are the trimmings for the asbestos roof (Will’s - yes, I know that it’s a bit overscale, even for the larger pitched types, but not unacceptably so for the latter).
View attachment 219044
The angled edging is just one way of doing the edge of such a roof, but it’s what the real building at Glynde has. It’s just a bit of thick foil flattened and folded into an ‘L’.
The ridging took a bit of thought since it’s cast to shape. You can see the prototype in the picture above. This is pressed from foil in a simple tool made of a few scraps of 40 thou’.
View attachment 219046
It’s a groove to take a length of 1mm rod, pressed home with a small engineers square. It’s taken a couple of goes but the result is more than acceptable. Next I need to make something a little more sophisticated to produce Bridgwater double roman tiles which are utterly ubiquitous in this part of Somerset.
Adam