The first week of my annual leave is almost done and not a cracker has been done on Victoria Street. As I work through the list of other tasks designated, the main one this week is improving the storage of books in the front room, which included a trip to the Swedish shop of flat pack furniture plus a side trip to the hardware store.
While this project may not be directly layout related, the construction of the 'library' will result in freeing up space in the man cave of literature..
So far the art of hanging cabinets on a wall the is twelve feet long and eleven feet high with a door in that wall, has utilised my years of engineering experience and know how.
All was going well with the mounting of the timber rails which will support the cabinetry until I received a short, sharp lesson in one of Newtons Laws of Physics, gravity! Yes, I went base over apex off the ladder and trestle. The resulting crash together with an outburst of some old Anglo Saxon, had the bride running up the hall to see what mischief that I had done to myself.
As I lay somewhat uncomfortably on the floor and some construction materials, blinking and slowly doing a stocktake of potential injuries, the bride inquired if I was all right. (Does it look all right!)
I extracted myself from the mayhem slightly winded, nothing broken, nothing bleeding, but knowing full well that this will hurt eventually, with the resulting bruising that is somewhat similar to ones that cranky thoroughbreds deliver.
After a coffee break, and some words of self belief such as "suck it princess", I tidied up the work area before Worksafe were notified, and continued on, a little more slowly and carefully than before.
From under the debris in the front room.
Glenn.
Crossing Paths
Model Melbourne trams
Saturday, 21 March 2015
Monday, 9 March 2015
On the road to nowhere.
After about three weeks of doing 3/5ths of 5/8ths of nothing, I ventured across town to the Labor Day Weekend exhibition at Sandown, just to have a look for some inspiration for Victoria Street, with my two girls in tow, little cash or time were spent at either at the vendors and/or the exhibiting layouts.
This exhibition is more aimed at the young and the young at heart, so this would have to be one of the very rare times that I have paid to walk into a racecourse, then walked out with the same balance in ones wallet that one entered with. All in all, it was the usual traders, exhibits and merchandise these shows have in common.
After dropping the kids off at the outlaws, I wandered off home to think of what needed to be done to the layout, hence the title, the road to nowhere.
With Victoria Street undergoing an expansion, the concept of 'beyond' needed to be redefined after extending the layout left of the railway bridge, then the end of the known world at 4mm/1'. Therefore the new reverse curves now include a 'junction' going off scene into the foreground (Albert Rd) to the rest of the Melbourne tramway system.
The extra trackwork was made up of left over pieces of flexi track, nothing really scientific, rails of the diverging track soldered to one side of the running lines, rails for the crossing and points were filed, trimmed, and glued with five minute epoxy. The running rails were then given a few strokes of a needle file at the 'frogs' for the appearance of flange ways that provides the necessary clatter of tram traversing point work.
All of which managed to work with rollingstock without shorting out the Powercab.
The junction will now allow some tramway running rules such as-
-trams from/to the branchline (Ammo Factory) shall give way to those trams from the city.
-trams must make a compulsory stop at facing points, check setting before proceeding.
All of which is pointless, much like the 'junction'.
This exhibition is more aimed at the young and the young at heart, so this would have to be one of the very rare times that I have paid to walk into a racecourse, then walked out with the same balance in ones wallet that one entered with. All in all, it was the usual traders, exhibits and merchandise these shows have in common.
After dropping the kids off at the outlaws, I wandered off home to think of what needed to be done to the layout, hence the title, the road to nowhere.
The finished 'junction'
(road surface will hide the multitude of sins)
With Victoria Street undergoing an expansion, the concept of 'beyond' needed to be redefined after extending the layout left of the railway bridge, then the end of the known world at 4mm/1'. Therefore the new reverse curves now include a 'junction' going off scene into the foreground (Albert Rd) to the rest of the Melbourne tramway system.
The extra trackwork was made up of left over pieces of flexi track, nothing really scientific, rails of the diverging track soldered to one side of the running lines, rails for the crossing and points were filed, trimmed, and glued with five minute epoxy. The running rails were then given a few strokes of a needle file at the 'frogs' for the appearance of flange ways that provides the necessary clatter of tram traversing point work.
All of which managed to work with rollingstock without shorting out the Powercab.
The junction will now allow some tramway running rules such as-
-trams from/to the branchline (Ammo Factory) shall give way to those trams from the city.
-trams must make a compulsory stop at facing points, check setting before proceeding.
All of which is pointless, much like the 'junction'.
Setting the gauge of the point
(waiting for the epoxy to set)
A closer look at the junction
(note the gap between the diverging rails and the running rail
at the diamond so not to short out the Powercab)
Another angle of the tangle.
Give it another week, then I will be on annual leave, so the layout and rollingstock should get some attention after I complete the list of household projects as directed.
From the unwired end of the layout.
Glenn.
Wednesday, 18 February 2015
Slowly but surely.....
"Lost; time to work on layout, if found please contact me."
To say I have been busy lately would be an understatement, unfortunately this business is not layout related. Work and family life are the reasons why the progress on Victoria Street has slowed to a crawl.
Therefore the works on the 'Ammo' Factory are progressing, but very slowly, with the paving and track ballast installed, together with span poles, it is now starting to resemble something.
Glenn
To say I have been busy lately would be an understatement, unfortunately this business is not layout related. Work and family life are the reasons why the progress on Victoria Street has slowed to a crawl.
Therefore the works on the 'Ammo' Factory are progressing, but very slowly, with the paving and track ballast installed, together with span poles, it is now starting to resemble something.
Slowly getting there,
The span poles are coathanger wire, the blobs of blu-tak
are there so I do not open myself up.
There will be a mesh fence between the factory and
the terminus, mesh has been applied to the ground floor windows.
An overview of the terminus and siding.
The checkrail for the siding prevents
rollingstock climbing into the factory.
I know it needs more grubbiness and details, plus some overhead.
Points are thrown by wire in the tube method.
Now some artistic shots...
SW6 870 waits patiently.
X1 460 on an excursion sits in the siding.
Photo taken through perspex end plate.
From the other side the tracks, still not under the wires yet.Glenn
Sunday, 1 February 2015
Works at the 'Ammo' Factory.
As the tweaking of the track and rollingstock takes place with the new modules, the focus is shifting to the back scenes. The Ammo Factory module will represent the industrial aspect of Victoria Street, with its open ballasted track and the new extra siding, it lends itself to more operational opportunities.
The building for the module is my rework of the classic Metcalfe Victorian warehouse kit, why reinvent the wheel I say, as with any other flat packed product, this offers a base from which you can start with, then it is a case of choose your own adventure, that is only limited by your imagination.
Therefore I cut off the bottom storey, and adapted it as an extremely thin low relief building (13 mm or so at the least).
Some of the windows were bricked up, some door places have windows, and an extra door was installed on the ground level. The basis of the building is that the ground floor is workshop related, the next level is a light stores/technical area, then the top floor is for the administration/bureaucracy.
Like any bureaucracy, time keeping/wasting together with clock watching is a job in itself, this is why the 'Ammo' building has a clock mechanism provided from a cheap 'two bob' watch installed.
As with most of the structures on Victoria Street, I only need a portion of the whole kit for my needs, the left overs will find a home in the 'asset register' for further use at a later date.
External and internal lighting will be installed, plus the usual debris of a working factory with weathering.
I could have wandered up the road to the West Maribyrnong terminus for more reference photos, but photographing government facilities in this day and age might land oneself in playing a game of twenty questions that maybe not worth the hassle, and definitely could not be considered as fun.
From the far end of the layout still not under the wires.
Glenn
The building for the module is my rework of the classic Metcalfe Victorian warehouse kit, why reinvent the wheel I say, as with any other flat packed product, this offers a base from which you can start with, then it is a case of choose your own adventure, that is only limited by your imagination.
Therefore I cut off the bottom storey, and adapted it as an extremely thin low relief building (13 mm or so at the least).
A work in progress, poles, wire & ballast to come later.
Some of the windows were bricked up, some door places have windows, and an extra door was installed on the ground level. The basis of the building is that the ground floor is workshop related, the next level is a light stores/technical area, then the top floor is for the administration/bureaucracy.
I made it up as I went along, the bricked up windows show the
retro fitted amenities/toilets, external plumbing to come later.
Like any bureaucracy, time keeping/wasting together with clock watching is a job in itself, this is why the 'Ammo' building has a clock mechanism provided from a cheap 'two bob' watch installed.
The tramways biggest bundy clock.
taking turns of moving the shift workers.
An overview of the Ammo Factory module,
all 57cms of it in width.
External and internal lighting will be installed, plus the usual debris of a working factory with weathering.
I could have wandered up the road to the West Maribyrnong terminus for more reference photos, but photographing government facilities in this day and age might land oneself in playing a game of twenty questions that maybe not worth the hassle, and definitely could not be considered as fun.
From the far end of the layout still not under the wires.
Glenn
Thursday, 15 January 2015
The ever expanding empire.
I have been busy, just like last year at about this time when I refurbished the man cave/study, this year has been no different, I am in the process of expanding the layout, and as you can guess, the clearance testing was a success.
With just a few alterations from the original draft, Victoria Street now features a now reworked fiddle yard which shall be called the 'Ammo Factory', in honour of the long history of the domestic armaments industry of the inner west of Melbourne, with a newly installed siding to cater for extra trams for shift changes and enthusiasts excursions.
This is fed by a set of reverse curves from the Victoria Street alignment, that has a spur line feeding a small three road depot that will be called the Albert Road (Westside) depot. All of which fits inside the prescribed boundary enforced by the domestic authorities.
Albert Road seems a pretty good fit with Victoria Street, aligning with the empirical nature of the times when a lot of subdivision of inner Melbourne took place, (for the record, I am not a royalist, but I reckon the Queen would be a nice lady to have chat to; however the rest of the family would be another story)
Some more photos......
An overview of the new/reworked modules connecting
with the rest of Victoria Street
With just a few alterations from the original draft, Victoria Street now features a now reworked fiddle yard which shall be called the 'Ammo Factory', in honour of the long history of the domestic armaments industry of the inner west of Melbourne, with a newly installed siding to cater for extra trams for shift changes and enthusiasts excursions.
This is fed by a set of reverse curves from the Victoria Street alignment, that has a spur line feeding a small three road depot that will be called the Albert Road (Westside) depot. All of which fits inside the prescribed boundary enforced by the domestic authorities.
Albert Road seems a pretty good fit with Victoria Street, aligning with the empirical nature of the times when a lot of subdivision of inner Melbourne took place, (for the record, I am not a royalist, but I reckon the Queen would be a nice lady to have chat to; however the rest of the family would be another story)
Some more photos......
A family mugshot on the depot fan.
A Birney and the X1 on a gunzel trip wait on the siding for the
regular service to depart at the 'Ammo Factory'.
W5 800 waits for SW5 812 to proceed before
leaving the depot.
As X1 460 emerges from under the rail bridge, while
the two W's have a Mexican stand off.
This chicane module will be residential.
The Depot has a switch that can isolate it from the rest of the running lines, so in the event of DC running I do not have to remove DCC trams from the layout and so not to reprogram the rest of the fleet when setting/adjusting CVs while trial running/troubleshooting DCC rollingstock.
From not under the wires at this end of the layout.
Glenn.
Sunday, 11 January 2015
Plotting the reverse curves..
As stated in the previous post, the planning for the extension of Victoria Street is now a work in progress. The issue is that I have some domestic obligations to abide by in regards to the extension, that is that the study/man cave has a boundary line, that I dare do not cross, as not to invoke the full force of the domestic authorities.
The reverse curves that I have planned for the extension are an example of the town planning that occurs when former Melbourne municipalities employed either different and/or incompetent surveyors to plot aligning streets/roads from one subdivision to another.
There are still to this day plenty of reverse curves of the Melbourne tramway system that obviously traverse within the boundaries of the former municipal authorities, these roads and the real estate were plotted and sub divided when small suburban councils were operated like personal fiefdoms. The tramways came along later, and had to fit the alignment.
Classic examples of these are the route 1 to East Coburg, that cranks from right to left from Lygon St across and along a short section of Albion St into Holmes St, in East Brunswick.
Another less extreme example is the route 12 to St Kilda/Fitzroy & Park Streets, this deviates from Danks St across Mc Gregor St, to Patterson St, in Middle Park ( the eastern edge of the former City of South Melbourne).
My example, as plotted, forecast and basically dreamt up, is so far according to clearance testing seems to be a working proposition.
The two ends of the layout were plotted, (the railway station and the fiddle yard/new ammo factory) across the available space left in the study and the potential bench/layout area.
The reverse curves that I have planned for the extension are an example of the town planning that occurs when former Melbourne municipalities employed either different and/or incompetent surveyors to plot aligning streets/roads from one subdivision to another.
There are still to this day plenty of reverse curves of the Melbourne tramway system that obviously traverse within the boundaries of the former municipal authorities, these roads and the real estate were plotted and sub divided when small suburban councils were operated like personal fiefdoms. The tramways came along later, and had to fit the alignment.
Classic examples of these are the route 1 to East Coburg, that cranks from right to left from Lygon St across and along a short section of Albion St into Holmes St, in East Brunswick.
Another less extreme example is the route 12 to St Kilda/Fitzroy & Park Streets, this deviates from Danks St across Mc Gregor St, to Patterson St, in Middle Park ( the eastern edge of the former City of South Melbourne).
My example, as plotted, forecast and basically dreamt up, is so far according to clearance testing seems to be a working proposition.
The two ends of the layout were plotted, (the railway station and the fiddle yard/new ammo factory) across the available space left in the study and the potential bench/layout area.
The faint pencil lines show the extent of the chicane
module, the ammo factory module to the lower left, the
railway station module to the top right, the three way point
leads into the (future) depot. A Peco set track point has been
plotted to feed the depot three way point.(all going well?)
The Ammo Factory/fiddle yard module will have another
commercial Y point fitted for the siding. I have done away
with building a single blade point for reliability.
with building a single blade point for reliability.
The pencil lines show the overhang of the running boards,
as these are my longest/widest bogie trams, all others do fit inside the envelope.
There is enough room for everyone.
Enjoying taking things further than pencil and paper from under the wires,
Glenn.
Tuesday, 6 January 2015
Plotting the course.....for the new year.
Almost two years ago, I posted a punch list of things that I wanted to be done with the layout.
Some housekeeping has also been done, W5 800 which blew a motor at Caulfield has had a heart transplant and is now back in service.
The Bride's parents bought me some weathering pastels (Pan Pastels) for Christmas, I have few Bachmann Brill bodies to practice on before I grubby up my fleet, plus that I have been reliably informed that 'less is more' with this medium unless I want my models to resemble drag queens.
What will the new year will bring...
From under the wires with a new punch list.
Glenn.
**Sunday, 3 February 2013
Time to get organised.
Several projects have been horribly neglected since becoming besotted with DCC, materials for other projects have stockpiled to the point that the domestic authorities are in the process of intervention.
PROJECTS THAT REQUIRE ATTENTION!!!
PROJECTS THAT REQUIRE ATTENTION!!!
- The illumination of Victoria Street, so far only one module has been completed, The Railway Station. The rest of the layout still resides in the dark ages.
- Project completed for Caulfield Exhibition.
- The animation of the crossing gates.
- Nailed it!
- The construction of several other classes of Melbourne trams, these will include the W2, X2, VR, PCC 1041 and a Z1/3, plus the reworking/painting of several existing models with the correct decals and the installation of DCC friendly lighting.
- Needs to improve, I have been distracted by other non Melbourne models, but this W2 from the dark arts of 3D printing looks very interesting. This year this will be the year.
- The construction of 2 to 3 more modules featuring back scenes such as residential, educational, and industrial to compliment the current retail, recreational and railway aspects, all with simple trackage to offer longer operational running.
- Planning in progress, intend to do clearance testing of chicane with flexitrack before committing to building module and depot. Watch this space.
- The updating of the track wiring for DCC, and the elimination of terminal strips in favour of plugs and sockets.
- Project completed for Caulfield Exhibition, with the ability to run DC
Some housekeeping has also been done, W5 800 which blew a motor at Caulfield has had a heart transplant and is now back in service.
The Bride's parents bought me some weathering pastels (Pan Pastels) for Christmas, I have few Bachmann Brill bodies to practice on before I grubby up my fleet, plus that I have been reliably informed that 'less is more' with this medium unless I want my models to resemble drag queens.
What will the new year will bring...
- Hopefully an extension to the layout.
- Some different Melbourne models to be built and modified.
- More DCC fit outs.
- Experiments with live overhead on DCC.
From under the wires with a new punch list.
Glenn.
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