I hate going into our loft. After we cleared out the garage, any chance I had of putting a layout up there went out the window. I also hit my head, and, worst of all, is coming down the ladder with anything in your hands.
And I'm sure there is a reason why Issy needs so many boxes of Xmas decorations, half of which always go back up there, unused.
Which brings me back to Dark Hall Halt.
And THAT bridge.
I don't know why it has become such a blocker for me, so to speak.
It isn't going to be 100% accurate, whatever I do, and I know I could get away with using a combination of the Scalescenes and Lcut parts. But I keep overthinking it, whilst at the same time struggling to keep my mental model of it in focus. There is one other factor. I've got to deal with the Mosslanda shelf's limited width whilst giving the illusion that the path to the platform descends from the road over the bridge. In my head, I can't quite visualise how I do that. I'm beginning to think it could mean increasing the slight skew of the real bridge to make it more extreme in the model. That means playing around with a lot of 3D geometry, but I think it's the way to go. At 3am this morning, I had to remind myself that I can just build a card carcass and throw it in the bin if it doesn't work. But it also means I wish I hadn't cut panels off the Lcut plategirders.
Whilst all that is going on, in the real world I'm trying to design a qualification and online course for a client, and having pretty much the same problem in a different way. How to lead people into a model, and help them quickly see connections.
Meanwhile, the garden now looks very different, having had a mature tree felled. Needless to say, the tree surgeons seem unaware of how expensive LGB track is....
Anyway, next week I'm paying a flying visit to Chris Stockdale, the doyen of 7/8ths scale, to pick up my James Hilton Ruston.





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