garrymartin
My Family,Railways, Beer and the Seaside

Very effective pictures especially the last one. Its only the site of your house in the background that gives it away. The early logo on the P.T.?
Cheers Garry, yes I've already got the Lion on Wheel logo from Fox Transfers left over from a previous project and have sent a PM to Matt re. the number plates.garrymartin said:Very effective pictures especially the last one. Its only the site of your house in the background that gives it away. The early logo on the P.T.?
Put it this way mate, in the current Railway Modeller there's a gauge 3 portable layout of a VERY basic station with one siding - and it's almost 50% longer than my garden. So, if I do get any more standard gauge, it ain't goin far.Gizzy said:Looks like you are going Standard gauge....
i think, he should buy the third one. it's the only one, that has proven, to be suitable for breeding.oberinntalbahn said:We await SG developments with baited breath. In the meantime, that quote is priceless .............yb281 said:........... father, son or holy goat??
yb281 said:As mentioned when I converted the Bachmann Thomas trucks to G.3, they are a little on the narrow side and this shows with the buffer spacing.
The buffers on the GRS pannier are fully sprung mate, so much simpler to re-position the plastic ones on the wagons.Rhinochugger said:yb281 said:As mentioned when I converted the Bachmann Thomas trucks to G.3, they are a little on the narrow side and this shows with the buffer spacing.
Did any panniers have large headed buffers fitted?
Indeed Don, not only are the pannier's buffers sprung, but they're beautifully turned from steel (?). The photos show this. Gluing discs to them would be sacrilege. Moving (or even replacing) the cheapo plastic ones on the wagons seems a no brainer to me.Granitechops said:Reading Rhinochuggers post, it came to my mind that some shunters had oversized (ie larger diameter faces) so that they could shunt wagons with narrower or even wider buffer spacings
so 4 discs glued to pannier, eh voila no need to change all the wagons.
simple solution.
but that would probably no be a solution that I would fancy as engines with them look a bit 'unreal'
but why go the simple route ? :thinking:yb281 said:Indeed Don, not only are the pannier's buffers sprung, but they're beautifully turned from steel (?). The photos show this. Gluing discs to them would be sacrilege. Moving (or even replacing) the cheapo plastic ones on the wagons seems a no brainer to me.Granitechops said:Reading Rhinochuggers post, it came to my mind that some shunters had oversized (ie larger diameter faces) so that they could shunt wagons with narrower or even wider buffer spacings
so 4 discs glued to pannier, eh voila no need to change all the wagons.
simple solution.
but that would probably no be a solution that I would fancy as engines with them look a bit 'unreal'