Filling between the rails

tramcar trev said:
Oh and check out the tram No 198, anyone know anything about it? Yet another example on my to build list. Its in Geelong approaching another marvel of the era a railway xing....
images

Engaging pedant mode......
The destination sign in the photo says Point Ormond, so there is 60km of water between that tram and Geelong as the seagull flies, though it is travelling vaguely in the right direction.......;)

I don't know the Melbourne system well, but the photo was taken somewhere in Glenhuntly Rd. in the mid '50s. The Point Ormond end of the line no longer exists and it now crosses the VR suburban system at Elsternwick on a bridge, rather than the level.

#198 was an MMTB Q class, one of the last 4wheel MMTB trams built in '23. They were rebuilt for use as night trams before the war and #198 was eventually converted to a welding car in '58, then finally to sleeper carrier car 15W in '59. It survived as a works car until the '80s. It still exists in it's final form at the TSLV museum out at Bylands, north of Melbourne. See www.tramway.org.au

The operation of the 'tramway square' as they were known was set out in the VR General Appendix, basically the DPDT switch that selected the voltage over the level crossing was mechanically interlocked with the gate mechanism when the VR still had manned signal boxes at those locations. These days, I guess it is built into the auto signalling system as the manned signal boxes have been closed and the gates replaced with boom barriers.

Geelong didn't (still doesn't) have electric suburbans, so there was no 'tramway square' on the Geelong system, or even a level crossing, as the trams went under the VR line where it crossed near Kardinia Park football ground.

Never been much of a fan of trams. Probably because I had to travel on them regularly as a kid and two trips a day to school in a Bendigo winter was not something to remember fondly..........

Regards,
Graeme
 
Bumping this so I can track it. I will be paving in the rail on my harbor layout.
 
PS any suggested ways how to do this would be greatly appreciated.
 
I did it my way, regrets? I had a few, but then too few to mention...
Its on the forum but probably archived so I'll give you the URL to my blog where I covered this topic in tedious detail; http://trevs-tramway.blogspot.com.au/2013/01/interesting-work-thisg-scale-sett-well.html
Remember, I always do things the hard way so after you get the idea try new methods. I even went to the extreme of adapting a Dremel router base with 2 pins and a tile cutting bit to even up the flangeway but after using it for a while discovered it was just as easy to used a cut off disc to smooth the edges in the flangeway....
I'll say it again, its tedious work but the results have people gawking in wonder, which is what you want rather than picking up small details of no real significance.... Allow yourself lots of licence, it has to look hand done to look real...
 
Tim Brien said:
Children drank milk so no cans of 'V', 'Red Bull', 'Coke', etc for unruly sugar crazed juveniles to thoughtlessly throw away.

We used to get to take the bottles back and get money for them! That stopped you chucking them about!!! ;) ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D
 
bobg said:
We used to get to take the bottles back and get money for them! That stopped you chucking them about!!! ;) ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D
Thought you had found 'gold' if you found a returnable bottle when a kid. - So some rubbish got removed!
That and cycling round pressing button 'B' in the telephone boxes to see if there was any change lurking there!! ;) :D :D
 
tramcar trev said:
I did it my way, regrets? I had a few, but then too few to mention...
Its on the forum but probably archived so I'll give you the URL to my blog where I covered this topic in tedious detail; http://trevs-tramway.blogspot.com.au/2013/01/interesting-work-thisg-scale-sett-well.html
Remember, I always do things the hard way so after you get the idea try new methods. I even went to the extreme of adapting a Dremel router base with 2 pins and a tile cutting bit to even up the flangeway but after using it for a while discovered it was just as easy to used a cut off disc to smooth the edges in the flangeway....
I'll say it again, its tedious work but the results have people gawking in wonder, which is what you want rather than picking up small details of no real significance.... Allow yourself lots of licence, it has to look hand done to look real...
Thanks
 
No you're all missing the point. What has disappeared is COMMON SENSE and its my thread and I'm having the final word here.
 
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