Monday, 22 April 2019

Introducing: Mount Wilson

So after deciding not to build a layout just yet, this weekend I started building my next layout. The confluence of 4 days off, pay day, the completion of a plan I was happy with, the offer of the use of my brother's arsenal of power tools, and as my brother put it, my "incessant whinging about building a layout" (paraphrased) combined to make quite a productive weekend.

The Plan

Before I get to the description, let's get down to what it looks like.


Concept

In real life, an alternate crossing of the mountains by rail was surveyed in the 19th century, however the grades and earthworks required to build a line from Richmond through to roughly Bell/Clarence were considered prohibitively expensive, and thus the current main western line won out. The real Mount Wilson area is a sleepy hollow dotted with European-looking trees which hide much of the natural Australian bush, much like the rest of the upper Blue Mountains in the more built-up areas. 

In my layout scenario, both the Kurrajong line and the Mt Wilson branch were built simultaneously in the 1920s. Accordingly, the layout will have a pre-cast concrete Pc2 station as was common of lines constructed at that time. Initially, the railway hauled fruit and various produce from the busy Co-op siding to Bell, where it was attached to eastbound goods trains heading to Sydney. The coming of the railway turned the village into a tourist destination, increasing passenger traffic on the line as the road traffic of the day struggled with the grades of Bells Line of Road.
Post-war, the discovery of coal nearby and a surplus of ex-military vehicles made a mine served by road haulage from the valley floor to the railhead at Mount Wilson viable, and a siding was laid for the purpose of loading coal trains in the yard. The grades on the fictitious branch line are still quite steep, which reduced the length of trains which could be hauled up the line by steam. The NSWGR took the opportunity to extend the overheads for the Great Western Line down to Mount Wilson during the 1950s to cope with coal traffic. The whole yard was intended to be expanded to facilitate longer trains, however, well, local hoteliers, a wealthy land-holding family, and state politics. Apart from an upgrade to the frequency of the passenger service, nothing changed.

Fast forward to the era represented: the late 1970s.

The passenger service lives on with mining families sending their kids to school further down the mountains, plus the comings and goings of tourists and bushwalkers. The coal trains are now hauled by electric locos and use modern, pneumatic-unloading wagons of the CH and CTS type. Demands of road and mine traffic in the area is sufficient to require a dedicated fuel siding, and it's still more convenient for the local growers to cart their produce by rail, for now, which they do courtesy of the Co-op siding. As well as fruit, machinery, mine supplies, farming equipment, tar for the local roads, and general goods is deposited and dispatched at the siding. 

Traffic
I plan on having four main types of train on the layout, with each move taking around 10-40 minutes, depending on what I have time for. These are:
General goods - diesel-hauled, with assorted wagons for the Co-op and fuel siding
Coal - electric loco-hauled, 4-car trains of either CH or CTS hoppers plus guard's van. 
Passenger - loco-hauled, 2-car supplementary interurban cars or a railmotor at a later date.
Pay bus - because why not?

This roster maintains the 'instant-on' concept I've enjoyed through Rozelle Street, and it's compatible with an unpredictable work and family schedule.

Here's a teaser of what will hopefully turn out as quite a pleasant scene when complete:


Next time I'll add some construction photos of where we got to this weekend and the overall impressions as I map the track plan to the baseboard.

In the meantime, release the navvies!


Cheers,
Ben

Saturday, 6 April 2019

2019 so far

I was at the Kaleen exhibition last weekend and someone asked me what's happening with Rozelle Street and a few modelling projects I'd started. Which reminded me, I really need to update the blog...

Weren't you building another layout?
Well, that was the plan. To cut a long, long story short, we found a house and entered into an agreement with the owners, who cancelled the sale about two weeks later when they discovered for themselves just how difficult it is to get an Australian bank to lend you money at the moment if you're not a multi-property-owning Tzar with a seven-figure income.

I'm not bitter about this at all...

So for now, it's back to the trudge of Saturday open house inspections. I had come up with a few layout plans for the was-to-be house, but I've stopped sketching out ideas for the time being. We all want to squeeze every last centimetre out of the space we've got for a layout, and until I know what those dimensions will be I'm collecting ideas but holding off on drawing up anything concrete.

The trials and tribulations of actual modelling
After receiving OTM's MUB cars late last year I decided it was high time I finished MFA 2706. Progress was good over the New Year break until I needed a brake wheel. Using a LIMA 72'6 underframe, I've chopped some details out and prepared others. It's not going to be a complete model of the underfloor detail, but about 90% of it will be there.



I've now plugged the holes where the old details used to be, with 1mm styrene sheet. AM models used to make 10" and 18" brake wheels in brass, but try as I might, I can't find any of them, in any of the Sydney hobby shops. I'm trying a few of the cottage manufacturers directly at the moment, so we'll see how that goes. In the mean time, the MFA project is on hold again.

It seems like every time a new, much-anticipated RTR item is released, people lament the disappearance of actual modellers from the hobby. Whilst it's not entirely accurate, it's not hard to see why most modellers are sticking with RTR or just buying standard RTR and weathering it than spending their precious spare time chasing that one item across all of the hobby shops in the country. I can't be the only one in this boat either.


I did manage to get the sides and roof complete though. I used 10mm Tamiya tape to represent the malthoid roofing, butted against each other with a very slim gap in between to give an idea of the join between the two.



The Auscision 2BS bogies I'm using are great and free-rolling, but are fouling the sides of the underframe. Might be as simple as adding some Kadee washers, but I also don't want the appearance of the car sitting high up on the bogies with lots of daylight underneath.

A welcome surprise
I was fortunate to receive an Auscision Pay Bus as a gift this week, and after originally holding out I am really impressed with it.



The finish on the model appears to have a much more dull lustre than the paintwork on other Auscision models straight out of the box, and I'm reluctant to do much more to it than lightly weather the axle boxes and a tiny portion of the lower part of the body.

I'll send it off to get a DCC chip, sound and a keep alive added, but all in good time. It's quite a versatile item of rollingstock and with an operating history of up to 1986 is equally at home on Rozelle Street as any other layout I build in my era.

Other arrivals




I've been keeping an eye out for Trainmaster WSCs for a few years and recently 3 came up for sale through one of the Facebook groups. They've been weathered - possibly too heavily for my era - but I was particularly spurred on after seeing a crisp decal set from Casula Hobbies which is a great improvement over the hand-drawn one that comes on the model as standard. Naturally, when I traipsed down to Casula Hobbies to buy the decals they were sold out. I asked when or if there would be another run and was met with "Yeah, maybe."

Sigh. Guess that goes back into the 'one day' box.

SDS' ICX container wagons also arrived, which means I finally have an appropriate wagon to put my LRC containers on and operate in and out of the meat siding on Rozelle Street.



Now that I've got these I should really finish the milktainers too. At least I have everything I need for those.

Until next time!

Ben