
There were 35 of these built, nos. RM100 ? RM134 and first went into service in New Zealand in 1955. The last of them endured until 1978.
I am in the process of scratch building a model of this railcar. It will be RM133.
At 1:24 scale (1 3/4? = 3?-6? gauge) it is 1.35m long.
The wheels/axles are ?off the shelf? at very close to scale size. The chassis is constructed from wood. I have used styrene plastic sheet for the body. 2mm thick for the sides which had windows cut out using a wood-router. The roof and lower sides (tumble home) are from 0.5mm. The vacuum formed ends are from 0.75mm. The two cow catchers, 6 step assemblies and the 21 air vents are also all vacuum formed.
The model is battery powered (10 x D size NICADS) with an RCS controller unit giving forward/reverse/speed control, start/stop of a diesel sound generator (pitch changing with speed) and triggering of a horn. This is a digital storage device loaded with an air horn noise down-loaded from the web. There are two speakers for this, one located behind each cow catcher. Only the appropriate forward facing one is enabled for each direction of travel. One end bogie is powered, via a ?Tamiya? gear train connected to a Decaperm motor above the floor.
I am now using 2.4G radio, having ?given away? 27Mhz and all of its interference problems.

This photo shows the model a while ago also with my Model T railcar, (another subject) and its turn table on my raised track. The other photos are in order of construction.


Styrene held in frame for heating in the oven.


Bogie detail. Note power pick-up wires now not there!


10 x Nicad batteries and Decaperm motor.

Cow catcher teeth fabricated from brass sheet and strip. Then glued into vacuum formed frame.

Vacuum formed vents. Easy way to make a lot of the same thing.
I still have the making of the ?below floor level? detail ahead of me.
I will be happy to try to answer any questions re the above.