Another weekend and another model railway show.
Rather an odd one, perhaps because of the venue
The Pavilion Gardens are rather eccentric. From an exhibition perspective, the plus point is that for once, the lighting is natural. I didn't once struggle with white balance. The downside is it is a little cramped and the show seems smaller than it really is.
That is a shame, because it has an A-list roster of layouts. Most of them would be the headline layout at regional shows, or be surrounded by inpenetrable crowds at the big shows.
So this is going to be another photofest, but don't read anything into the order or the number of photos. Every layout deserved to be there.
Edgeware Rd
OK, this was my favourite layout if judged by how long I spent watching it. 7mm scale. It was amazing how much the scene encompassed without feeling cramped.
And the trackwork was superb.
Swan Street
I liked the multilevel aspect of this, and the more urban aspects of it. Let down slightly by the rock faces and the wall on the embankment top, but that's me being picky.
Nicola Landing
A layout that is underrepresented in my photos, even though I was really keen to see it. I was rather focussed on the shipping, which is relevant to an idea that has been at the back of my mind for a long time.
Port William
This appeared to be seen as a bit of a celebrity layout. I liked the stock, but something seemed a little lifeless about it in my eyes, and inconsistent in terms of detail.
Millhouses
Two Bridges
Having said which, the basic layout has tons of potential. It is just a little too clinical and, in my eyes, the position of the signal box doesn't work. Whether that is compositional or a gut feeling that it isn't prototypical, I don't know.
Grindley Brook
Iron Mould Lane
Hindlow
Hartley Bank Screens
This shows the frustration of trying to take photos of small, front-operated layouts. But then a show is about people seeing the layouts, not photographers.
OO9 Society
I love the heritage displays that the OO9 Society put on. Here we see two examples from different ends of the spectrum. A Polar Bear built by Charles Insley, and the David Mander Darjeeling Garratt. A loco that amazed me when I first saw a photo of it some 50 years ago.
Ashover Butts

Exchange Sidings
Burnham-on-Sea
I was really pleased to see it again. I was also impressed by how the operators reacted with children, without being precious about the layout.
Eldir Fach
St Ettienne-Ea- Caux
A 10 minute walk from home.
ReplyDeleteThere's always a decent selection of layouts at this show, in a variety of scales, although S was missing this year for the first time (S fascinates me, I'd like to try it one day).
Millhouses is like a geography lesson on building a railway in a landscape, it really does look like the landscape came first and the railway had to fit into it.
I spent a fair amount of time (I was there for 3+ hours) in front of Edgeware Road, broad gauge is always interesting.
Grindley Brook was great for just watching trains go by, enjoying the sound and mass of decent length 7mm trains.
Iron Mould Lane has been on the circuit longer than the recent industrial fad!
The one thing that really caught my eye was a scratchbuilt Prince style loco in the 009 Society's heritage collection, a loco built to 8mm gauge in the 50s about which almost nothing is known.
I've alwas fancied dipping my toes into 5.5mm NG, I suppose because of distant memories of those early GEM kits.
DeleteI've thought about 1:72, there's plenty of kits that can be used and 9mm in 1:72 is very close to 2'. Yes you'd need to scratchbuild the locos, but with the advantage of a little more room inside. Stock could be 009, especially if you use Dundas or Peco skips which are overscale for 4mm.
DeleteThere are also a few 3d printed locos that are almost certainly closer to 1/72 scale , like one of the Ruston Proctors I have.
DeleteInteresting. If I'd not been booked out to other events, this was on my radar. Some really nice layouts.
ReplyDeleteIt seems to consistently attract high quality layouts, and those that have stood the test of time. It struck me as a halfway house between most exhibitions and things like ExpoEM. There was a definite finescale vibe, as I think the photos show.
DeleteLast year they had Copenhagen Fields, with a big Tri-ang layout directly opposite. Both were wonderful in their different ways.
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