Friday, 17 October 2025

Simplicity

Many years ago, when I was a lecturer in a management school, I always recommended this book

Simplicity is powerful, but not always easy. Some of you might know Moravec's Paradox that powerful AI tools cannot accomplish some tasks that a three-year-old can master. I spent four hours this week trying to record a simple fifteen-minute video on agenetic AI that will be edited down by the client to simple soundbites. 

To save you watching it, I was being paid to say it was a good thing.

I've never built anything but simple layouts. I sometimes thing I would make more progress if I built a Big Project.  I had one in mind at the old cottage, where I had the space for permanent benchwork. There is something appealing about a layout you can work on as and when, without having to clear space and dig out boxes. which is what I've been doing to recover from the podcast stress.

First of all though, we've had an Autumn clean up in the garden. After eighteen months we are slowly working out what works, what doesn't, what is too old to be saved, and what needs to be showcased.

I've never been happy with the putative 7/8ths line. I took the radical step this week of removing the siding.



I'm happier with this, but not "Happy." It may be different when I replace the LGB track with the planned hand-built track, and it is ballasted and sceniced. I'm not convinced, though, and for now it will remain a test track. Two other options I've considered for this space are using it for a more complex E2E 16mm line, or even as a scenic 5" gauge line, continuing on a bridge across the steps into the flower bed.The track to do that is already sat in the garden. The bridge would need to be a hefty but removable structure, and it would mean finding the right loco and rolling stock - vintage first-generation Maxitrak being ideal.

So where would the 7/8ths go? It would have to be a simple oval and a siding in one of the flowerbeds. Not the end of the world, because I could just watch the trains go by and not worry about them flying off at one end or hitting a concrete wall at the other.

Meanwhile, back in the office/studio/workshop...

Two things struck me this week. The first is that I have more 4mm "stuff" in here than I realised, especially taking into account what is in the display unit on my wall. The second is that the brackets currently holding up a long Mosslanda shelf could equally hold up one of the other old, shorter but wider shelf units I've got. More to the point, I've got two of them. So one could be a fiddle stick/yard and the other could be the scenic module on display.


My first thought was to reuse the surviving Tanat Valley buildings from Apa. It is tempting, but since they were built, I've acquired a rather large industrial fleet. Those black corrugated iron buildings are rather dark and dingy. I still love them, but they need a larger space to look their best. Something like TAoC if it had been built in mid-Wales.Don't hold your breath.

The industrial fleet is intended for something based on the local Cromford and High Peak, and that is an option.



A simple canal (or narrow gauge) railway connection.

But I'm drifting towards an old idea of a mash-up between the North Sunderland and the Wisbech & Upwell that inspired it. A generic light railway terminus on the fringe of somewhere that isn't anywhere, despite the hopes of the investors. Barren, bleak but beautiful. An East Coast version of Shell Island



Friday, 3 October 2025

Nothing to see

 James Hilton recently posted a layout idea that has struck a chord with many people.

The simplicity reminded me of a section of my old OO9 layout, which was essentially a scene inspired by a panoramic painting of the Talyllyn Railway on a postcard, combined with an Airfix turntable featuring 9mm gauge track, allowing it to turn a whole train.

I'm thinking now I could do something like that now, but using a boxfile, with most of the long side cut out, to frame the view a bit like a letterbox. Getting the Cadeby layout out for a quick photo today reminded me how satisfying a very simple scene can be.








Thursday, 2 October 2025

Read This

 No, not this post, but the one it links to.

Several of us, notably James Hilton, have tried to be brutally honest about the link between model railways and mental health in recent years.

In my own case, and a few others I know, the link isn't always positive. Yet another failed project hitting the WPB doesn't help your sense of self-worth.

However, there is a link, and it can be helpful. Many of us need help, even when we don't recognise it. In fact, I wonder how many people the hobby has saved without them even realising it.

It isn't just about white men of a certain age, who can feel marginalised and isolated. 

It can be those who struggle to find their own people - and those who, frankly, don't need people.

https://uk.hornby.com/community/blog-and-news/news/hornby-unplugged-are-traditional-hobbies-antidote-digital-overload?


Tuesday, 30 September 2025

Further CorrugatioNs

 First of all, a massive thank you to Mark for suggesting the use of coffee jar lids to impress corrugations into aluminium foil. I'll try it just as soon as I can find some suitable lids.

In the meantime, I've been sorting out the office/workshop to try to separate the things I need to refurbish Flemish Quay and those I need to move forward with the N-gauge projects. And, even, possibly to build something akin to my original APA layout.

Being a member, as you might expect, of a FB group dedicated to corrugated iron, I was aware that different sheet sizes and pitches of corrugation were used for different types of buildings.

I was about to put a pack of Ambis / Eastwell Iron 4mm CI into the Apa Valley box, when I spotted the magic wording "Domestic Pattern" on the label.

Gears clicked. 


It turns out to have about the same pitch as the Ratio N gauge sheet, though the profile isn't quite as good. 

So I think I have my solution for now, though I'll try and get some HO scale sheet as well.

Or rather solutions. I'll use the ratio sheet where the thickness doesn't matter, and I'll use the Redutex and Scalescenes products for non-railway buildings and those in the background.


Tuesday, 23 September 2025

CorrugatioNs

Issy is in Goa, with a friend, so I'm on caring duties for the poodles and mum.

I was planning to get lots of things done, but a close shave with a surprisingly sharp mandolin in the kitchen has stopped any thought of modelling. until my fingertip heals...

I've also been really busy writing what is called Thought Leadership. Or, as I call it, giving away all my best material for free.

Did I say the accident was responsible for my modelling hiatus? 

Actually, it is my struggles with corrugated iron in N gauge.

Bear in mind that, on both of my current projects, CI is at the front and centre. The Cambrian loved CI.

I had a real breakthrough in 4mm when I realised, whilst making the doors of an OO9 loco shed, that I could use Wills transparent corrugated sheet to capture the thinness of the real thing. and i could combine it, as here, with the thick structural sheet.


In N, I am really struggling. There are a lot of products on the market, but none match my need. Often the corrugations are more box section than corrugations, or the sheets are too small, or the material too thick.

If it was just a small building at the back of a wide baseboard, I could use Scalescenes, but it doesn't work when it is a big building at the front of a layout.

An idea I'm considering is embossing aluminium tape using a bolt. It is promising, but I'm still a long way from an effective solution

Sunday, 14 September 2025

Bournville Heritage Day

For something like eighteen years, our family lived in Bournville, running one and later, two newsagents on MaryVale Road.

They were very mixed years for me, more bad than good, but I'm still friends with some people from those days and there were some good times. A lot of those involved my garden railway!




And crewing on Pat Ireland's The Lady Disdain





But there was also a lot of feeling the weight of the world on my shoulders, feeling very alone, and having a complete nervous collapse.




I always have mixed feelings about going back, but Mum still has friends there, and I guess I have unfinished business with the place. So we trotted off to this year's Bournville Heritage Day

We had a number of reasons to go. I wanted to view the frescoes by Mary Sargant Florence that decorated my old primary school's hall, and to go inside two landmark buildings that were inaccessible when I was young. Mum wanted to visit our old parish church. Keith, the vicar, was a wonderful, much-missed man, and we spent many happy Friday nights playing Badminton and Table Tennis in the youth club. We both wanted to meet up with Libby, one of our ex-papergirls, whom we hadn't seen for 45 or more years.


George Cadbury: A Great Man. 

Donald Healey was a friend of my father. His wife thought I was a rather beautiful toddler. I feel the same about his cars

Detail on the old bus. I believe JOJ533 holds the record for being the longest serving Birmingham bus.

I used to go to school on this!

Walking across the display of vintage and classic cars on The Green, Mum mentioned how much she would love to see an A40 Sports, the car my father had when they met. It isn't often wishes come true.

Garden railways are still alive and well in Bournville, even in the church!




The sort of detail that passes you by as a child.

My old schools. Needless to say, both built by the Cadburys.


Although these were the main reason I wanted to revisit my school, it really isn't practical to take photographs of them.
    
The Quaker Meeting House. I'd never been in before, and it was only a few years ago I learned that George Cadbury's ashes were interred here.

I don't remember the bus seats looking so classy

Selly Manor. The first time I'd been inside since I was about 10



The Carillion was playing a selection of light music.

The Serbian church. My other big reason to visit..



Tuesday, 19 August 2025

A Touch of the Hiltons

 Look, I know most of the wheels aren't on the rails...


I just plonked it there. 

What you can't see is that, sat at my desk, the module and loco are glimpsed from the side of my eye, at the very limit of my peripheral vision.

I can't see the shadow detail the photo shows, and sat here, the wall behind it has a luminous glow that is 3D.

It wasn't the purpose of the Kato module; it was just an experiment in creating a windblown riverbank. 

But it is making me think. It is taking me back to Saturday mornings at Victor's, with my ex-CPO, as a new world of modelling opened up in front of me