trammayo
Interested in vintage commercial vehicle, trams, t

Following a suggestion by Vic Smith "Planning a New Yard", I decided to make this little Rail Cart from a photo he posted.
The deck is 3mm ply, scribed, and the frame is stripwood - all glued together using weatherproof PVA.
Metalwork is scrap galvanised, drilled to take brass pins and the wheels came from a Chinese G Scale Railway set that was 50mm in gauge (the loco being the most unprototypical piece of bling I've clapped eyes on). The small diameter wheels originaly had no axles - they were like castors mounted between two frames. The ones I used were like this although the pic shows a modified bogie. AS I didn't want any axle end showing through, the hole in the back of the wheel accepted a 2.5mm welding rod superglued in for the new axle.
The wheels are held in place using inverted saddle brackets, drilled and pinned.
On the siding...

The deck is 3mm ply, scribed, and the frame is stripwood - all glued together using weatherproof PVA.

Metalwork is scrap galvanised, drilled to take brass pins and the wheels came from a Chinese G Scale Railway set that was 50mm in gauge (the loco being the most unprototypical piece of bling I've clapped eyes on). The small diameter wheels originaly had no axles - they were like castors mounted between two frames. The ones I used were like this although the pic shows a modified bogie. AS I didn't want any axle end showing through, the hole in the back of the wheel accepted a 2.5mm welding rod superglued in for the new axle.


The wheels are held in place using inverted saddle brackets, drilled and pinned.


On the siding...

