Rivermead Central

Fitzroy

Western Thunderer
I really like the post and rail- very evocative! And chemical blackening works so well, I always use it with brass these days.
 

76043

Western Thunderer
I've never seen any footage, but I wouldn't say anyone who has heard of the Sherwood Section by Norman Eagles would be dismissive of clockwork power. As we know he ran to a timetable, something that alleged finescale etched brass rivet counters can't even do today at exhibition!

The layouts look great but there's no clue as to what is going on at 99% of exhibition layouts. I can't see the point of getting all that detail right in places you can't see only to run it like a toy train.
Tony
 
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40057

Western Thunderer
I installed the Benham’s office building on the layout this afternoon. Again, as with the factory and the warehouse, a tricky job working at arm’s length. But no significant problems. Just a minor touch up required to the blue wall paint. And the building fits. Because installation is so difficult, and carries some risk of damage, I don’t do a test fit. Everything has been measured and I know the building ought to fit. Until it’s actually put in place though, a little bit of anxiety in case it isn’t right.

So here is the complete range of buildings that make up the Benham’s works:

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Left to right, site maintenance (with the sloping roof), main office, warehouse (with external un/loading platform and canopy) and last the factory (with internal un/loading bay). In total, around 5’ 6” long.

Here’s the office fixed in position:

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As can be seen, I painted a dark grey rectangle on the wall before I installed the office. The reason being that there will be a small gap, perhaps an inch, between the office and the next building to the south. I didn’t want the ‘sky’ going right down to ground level. So the grey rectangle represents some sort of further away building part of the silhouette of which will just be visible in the gap.

The office building is fixed in place by a single 1/2” countersunk wood screw through the bottom step. Since the building is against the wall, one screw stops it moving in any direction. The screw will pass as a drain cover if it is noticed at all.

I’m very pleased with the overall look of the Benham’s works. The jumble of roof profiles and building styles I think manages to create a city/industrial backdrop in a minimal depth.

As it happens, today is the second anniversary of me starting this thread. So nearly two years for these three buildings and five and a half feet of wall covered. I will have to speed up. In fairness to myself, much of the back wall of the layout will be covered with a representation just of a boundary wall. So much quicker to make than the Benham’s buildings. Going back to my first post in this thread, I said I was aiming to build impressionistic, not detailed, buildings finished in a muted palette of browns and greys. The purpose of the buildings being to provide a context for the vintage trains. I’m happy with the way the Benham’s works buildings have turned out — according to plan.

I would like to thank those who have shown an interest in this thread over the past two years and especially readers who have taken the trouble to post ‘likes’, ask or answer questions, or make contributions.
 

magmouse

Western Thunderer
I’m happy with the way the Benham’s works buildings have turned out

As well you might be - the buildings are excellent models in their own right, with the bonus of a style that fits beautifully with the vintage train look. I have also been impressed with your approach to repairing the stock and track - sensitive, but also practical and realistic about what can be done. It's a pleasure to follow the thread, especially as this isn't something I would ever do - I get to enjoy watching you do it instead!

Nick.
 

40057

Western Thunderer
As well you might be - the buildings are excellent models in their own right, with the bonus of a style that fits beautifully with the vintage train look. I have also been impressed with your approach to repairing the stock and track - sensitive, but also practical and realistic about what can be done. It's a pleasure to follow the thread, especially as this isn't something I would ever do - I get to enjoy watching you do it instead!

Nick.
Wow! Thank you very much!
 

Roger Pound

Western Thunderer
I've never seen any footage, but I wouldn't say anyone who has heard of the Sherwood Section by Norman Eagles would be dismissive of clockwork power. As we know he ran to a timetable, something that alleged finescale etched brass rivet counters can't even do today at exhibition!

The layouts look great but there's no clue as to what is going on at 99% of exhibition layouts. I can't see the point of getting all that detail right in places you can't see only to run it like a toy train.
Tony
The late Jack Ray also ran his Crewchester layout with clockwork power for many years too, although he did eventually change to electric power. With his clockwork motors he used telephone dial mechanisms as governors with great success apparently. I regret my understanding of the finer points of controlling clockwork mechanisms is nil, but I do recall his methods being recorded in his writings.

Apropos Benhams - a brilliant piece of work!

Roger
 

40057

Western Thunderer
The late Jack Ray also ran his Crewchester layout with clockwork power for many years too, although he did eventually change to electric power. With his clockwork motors he used telephone dial mechanisms as governors with great success apparently. I regret my understanding of the finer points of controlling clockwork mechanisms is nil, but I do recall his methods being recorded in his writings.

Apropos Benhams - a brilliant piece of work!

Roger
Fitting the governor from a telephone dial in place of the traditional governor is generally transformative to the performance of clockwork locomotive mechanisms. Speed is reduced, power delivery evened out over the length of run, haulage capacity increased. Also the motor runs almost silently, instead of the normal noisy rattle. I don’t know who had the idea but it originated in the 1950s and was indeed used in the Crewchester locomotives. The system is usually referred to as a ‘teleguv’. It wouldn’t be appropriate to alter a vintage locomotive, but I have two teleguv-fitted locomotives built by a friend (now sadly deceased) during the present century.
 

40057

Western Thunderer
It wouldn't be appropriate to alter a vintage telephone either these days!
Actually, there’s a whole community of vintage telephone collectors and restorers and businesses offering spare parts. When I needed a 1950s telephone dial governor to put in a locomotive, I ‘phoned a business offering restored and reconditioned vintage ‘phones — not optimistic they would have what I needed. But no, the manner of the person answering the ‘phone suggested requests for 1950s dial governors was perfectly normal and routine. In response to my tentative request, the question was simply which model of ‘phone was the replacement governor for. I was offered replacement governors to suit half a dozen different makes of ‘phone. Not having any idea whether there was any material difference in terms of performance in a locomotive, I chose at random a type from a common model of ‘phone. Cost £3.00. It worked fine.
 

40057

Western Thunderer
Having completed work on the Benham’s buildings, time to decide what to do next. I will aim to make progress with the next buildings project, but I want to concentrate some effort on repairing and restoring rolling stock. I also need to complete at least two further Lowko Track turnouts so I can lay some more track.

Back in February last year (my posts #65 and #66), I reported commencing work on a Windsor Model Co. (= Leslie Forrest) coal wagon:

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I didn’t get very far with it before laying it aside and getting on with other things. The wagon is a nice model and I am an admirer of Leslie Forrest’s work. As it came to me, the wagon was filthy all over and very oily underneath. There were a few old woodworm holes, some missing paint and much of the strapping was lifting from the body (with two parts missing). The coupling chains were a collection of poorly formed loops home-made from a variety of different wire.

A lot of work to put the wagon back in good order, but definitely worth doing.

I said last year I was very unsure of the age of this wagon. Since then, additional information has been added on the ‘Milbro Model Railways’ website stating that Leslie Forrest retired in 1958. My feeling is this wagon dates from the 1940s or ‘50s, not least because its cast-iron wheels are the type sold by Bassett-Lowke post-WW2. A probable construction date between 1945 and 1958 now seems most likely.

I have made a bit of progress during the last month with the repairs needed to the King Bros wagon. Further cleaning has been undertaken though there is more to do. I have attended to the strapping and corner plates where these were lifting off the wooden body:

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The lifting sections are now glued back down using diluted wood glue applied with a fine brush:

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One length of strapping will need to be replaced. The strapping and corner plates are made of embossed, foil-covered card, as sold by Mills Bros (Milbro) of Sheffield. I have a small quantity of this material, unused:

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I’ll have to match the paint of course, but the missing strapping on the King Bros wagon will be replaced with identical original material.

However, yesterday and today, I decided to work on (and complete!) repairs to another Windsor Model Co. mineral wagon. This one is in excellent condition. As usual, some of the applied strapping and corner plates were lifting off the wooden body. So glue was applied to reattach the lifting sections. Some minor repairs were then needed to the black paint after gluing. A light clean and it’s done, ready for traffic:

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This wagon carries no trade mark or identification regarding manufacture. However, Leslie Forrest’s work is unmistakable, both the method of constructing the body and his excellent hand painting. The similarities with the King Bros wagon are obvious. This time however — and unusually for a Windsor wagon — there is applied sole-bar detailing. The wheels are again post-WW2 Bassett-Lowke cast-iron wagon wheels. On the John Neal wagon though the Bassett-Lowke wheel sets have been modified to a wider back-to-back (27.5 mm instead of 27.0 mm) and the wheels thinned (5.7 mm instead of 6.0 mm). The slightly finer wheels should be OK on my track. The wheel sets I am sure were altered before fitting at the time the wagon was made; it would show if any of the W-irons had ever been unscrewed to change the wheels. Both sole-bars on the Neal wagon have a hole drilled for fitting a brake-lever pin rack. Clearly though, brakes were never fitted. The unused holes suggest some sort of ‘mass-production’ of wagon components by Forrest. He certainly had a prodigious output of models given how often his work is offered for sale.

I was advised when I bought it that the John Neal wagon was from Norman Eagles’ famous railway, The Sherwood Section of the LMS. I’m inclined to think that it was indeed from the Sherwood layout. The wheel standard (27.5 mm b/b) is correct and the single-link couplings. Leslie Forrest built much of the rolling stock for the Sherwood railway. However, the John Neal wagon is not visible in any photo I have of Norman Eagles’ railway. So I am not certain as to the wagon’s provenance. What is not in doubt is that it was built by Leslie Forrest and is a fine model that I am pleased to have for Rivermead Central.
 

Fitzroy

Western Thunderer
Actually, there’s a whole community of vintage telephone collectors and restorers and businesses offering spare parts. When I needed a 1950s telephone dial governor to put in a locomotive, I ‘phoned a business offering restored and reconditioned vintage ‘phones — not optimistic they would have what I needed. But no, the manner of the person answering the ‘phone suggested requests for 1950s dial governors was perfectly normal and routine. In response to my tentative request, the question was simply which model of ‘phone was the replacement governor for. I was offered replacement governors to suit half a dozen different makes of ‘phone. Not having any idea whether there was any material difference in terms of performance in a locomotive, I chose at random a type from a common model of ‘phone. Cost £3.00. It worked fine.
I'm glad to hear that. I have a couple of old telephone dial assemblies that I have been sizing up but holding back on, far better to just get a governor rather than sacrificing one. Who is the supplier?
 

40057

Western Thunderer
I'm glad to hear that. I have a couple of old telephone dial assemblies that I have been sizing up but holding back on, far better to just get a governor rather than sacrificing one. Who is the supplier?
Pieter

It’s getting on for twenty years ago I last bought some governors (I bought several, for stock). However, I would suggest you start here:


There are similar societies in the the US and UK, and businesses providing for collectors and restorers. Just like model trains, really. I assume beyond-repair ‘phones are used as spares donors.

Martin
 
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