This newest addition to projects I have yet to finish has it's origins even further back in time than Wantage.
By the age of 10, having moved to Cockfield, Suffolk, to a farmhouse about 100 yards from the Bury St Edmunds to Sudbury line, I knew of the GER , so I was interested in a 'very old' railway carriage in the garden of an acquaintance of my father. Later, I took photos and made a few notes and dimensioned sketches, of what I was, much later, able to identify as an Eastern Counties, or very early GER 21 ft Four Compartment Second.
With Buckjumper's help, and a lot of money to NRM and HMRS, I now have a large collection of GAs of carriage and wagon stock of the period, which I am using to make 7mm drawings, and hopefully, eventually, models.
Here's an example: a First Class from 1863.
( This was drawn using PaintNet, and thus is not usable for etching or other processes. I am now learning to use TurboCad, )
Long ago, when my eyesight was better, and I still had a lifetime ahead of me, I wanted to build models like Geoff Pember, and I had made some slow progress towards the techniques needed to make the underframes as he did.
An alternative approach was inspired by Andy B, the Parlytrains range, and our own Brush Type 4, and involved laser-cutting the underframe outlines in 1/8th" MDF.
I supplied Phil with a Turbo-Cad file of the frame outline, plus the details of the solebars and headstocks, complete with all bolt holes.
Two 1/8th" outlines can be glued together, giving a correct scale 11" depth. Small grooves on the mating faces provide locations for the longitudinal tie rods. Solebar and headstock overlays of 0.3 / 0.5 mm ply can then be glued to the frames, thus disguising the joins, and acting as a drilling template.
What is basically a fairly simple process can be made even easier by the use of a couple of jigs.
This one ensures that the two layers are aligned as accurately as possible:
Very simple; the layers are held while being tacked with CA, the unit is then removed and fixed permanently using 'Superphatic' glue, which is a bit like PVA, but can be brushed along the joint which it then fills by capillary action. The model aircraft guys use it to make balsa frames.
The outside edges are then lightly dressed with a sanding block checked for squareness, and after a sealing coat of PVA, the solebar overlays can be glued in place. I used the above jig to ensure they fitted correctly.
I then used this home-made angle plate attachment to my old Unimat to hold the frame vertical, while sliding it along the shelf at the bottom, to enable the accurate drilling of all the bolt holes to 0.4mm.
All holes pretty dead square, and no drill breakages!