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Wednesday 23 April 2014

Painting the bridge

Painting the bridge started with priming it in red oxide with an aerosol. You can paint directly onto plastic card but priming a model gives the paint something to key onto and facilitates the application of an even coat of paint. A heavy dry brush of my chosen brick base colour was follow by a thick wash of mortar colour. This is then followed by another dry brush of the brick colour to leave just the mortar colour between the bricks.



Very little brickwork is just one colour and bricks even from the same batch can vary quite considerably, especially with older bricks. To replicate this I use three different colours, one lighter than the base colour and two darker.  Painting each colour in a scatter pattern, soon starts to break up the base colour without having to paint every brick. Sometimes this can look a little stark or pixely, so to reduce this effect I give the brickwork one final, very light dry brush of the base colour again, which tends to blend everything together.



Having passed under a local railway bridge I became aware that most have water seepage and damp stains running down them so added these in with some life colour acrylics. You can't see it in the photos as it was added later but another finishing touch was to add smoke blasts from the trains
, however I did this later as I wanted to locate the bridge in situ to ensure the soot marks lined up with the tracks. 

Road bridge

I decided the first structure to be built for the railway would be the road bridge, which in the real world carries the Purley Way. After looking at a number of LBSCR bridge designs, I decided to build a generic bridge based on common features rather than a specific one. There are no photos of the original bridge at Waddon just a blurry glimpse in the background of a station shot. As what could be seen was the typical southern region abutment I decided to use that as a starter and to flank them with curved supporting curtain walls which were quite common. For the centre section I opted for the Wills riveted bridge panels as the blurry photo showed a similar iron centre section.



Construction started with the four abutments as I needed these to be as indetical as possible to avoid any sloping or twisting of the bridge. Doing this first allowed me to cut all the panels at the same time, ensuring they were the same shape and size. Once the carcasses were completed I clad them with Slaters brick card and connected them with a centre section and the iron panels.



Next came the supporting curtain walls. These were quite tricky as they not only slope downwards but are curved horizontally as well. I started with the vertical shape of the wall and initially cut this as a straight line, however I soon realised this needed to be a downward curve. Once the vertical shape of the wall was sorted I then had to deal with the horizontal curve. After various experiments with cardboard I cut four formers from plastic and glued them to the base of the walls. However, after gluing the former to the base of the walls it became apparent this was causing them to twist. The remedy was to add vertical formers to the back of the walls to keep them upright and square. 



This left just the detail of the capping stones and pavements. The abutment stones were a straight forward square of plastic with the edges chamfered but the curved walls caused yet another problem. I rounded the edges of a plastic strip to represent the black engineering bricks but when it came to glueing it in place it just wouldn't sit on the wall because of the downward and outward curves of the wall. This meant cutting the strip in a chopper and applying the resulting bricks one by one over a couple of very tedious hours.


No not a tank engine, a tank with an engine!

Being a Wargamer I wanted to add something military to the layout. Something interesting that would catch the eye rather than just a lorry or staff car. As Waddon is very near the old Croydon Airport and after the 30's rebuild of the station the running in boards actually said "Waddon for Croydon Airport", I thought the TA or army might have conducted defensive manoeuvres in and around the aerodrome as an exercise. Therefore I decided one of the little cameo scenes I was going to have was a broken down military vehicle.


Attending the Reading Wargames show I spoke to the owner and former club member of SHQ Miniatures and explained that I wanted a pre-war looking vehicle for my railway layout, such as an armoured car or Vickers light tank. Peter's first offering was a nice Lanchester or Rolls Royce armoured car, which was very reminiscent of WW1 and was still in service during the early part of the war. I then explained I wanted it broken down and cutting the solid bonnet to put in a raised engine cover was going to be difficult. Peter then showed me a very nice model of a Vickers Mk2 Medium Tank. These were in service from 1925 to 1939 and in 1941 still served as training tanks in Egypt, with some being  dug in as pill boxes as a last line of defense. Therefore this fitted my background fluff as they old and outdated by the late 30's and just the sort of hand me down a TA unit might receive. It also had that post WW1 look to it. Yes it had a turret, but it also has big square high profile, riveted construction, machine guns sticking out the sides and a door in the back! "Ideal" I said, "all I need now is a crew having a smoke and a cuppa while waiting for the tank to be repaired." Unfortunately I knew this would be a case of scouring miniatures for suitable poses, trimming off guns and trying to add something that looked like a tin cup. "I've just the thing" says Peter and hands me a packet of crew sitting and standing with cigarettes and cups of tea! One I couldn't use as he had shorts and an Arabic headscarf but the othe two were spot on. 


Googling images of the tank I found how the engine cowlings opened and cut these out by drilling, gouging and filing the very thick white metal hull. I then made up new covers from plastic card and fixed then in place with super glue. I also stuck inside the hull a small piece of scrap plastic sprue with lugs on to give the general impression of an engine and manifold. Next I filed off the closed outline of rear door and added a new one slightly open, also in plastic card.


Pleased with my efforts I painted the tank dark green based on the one still running at Bovington Tank Museum and added spare transfers and weathering powders. The large letters and numbers were tricky but I found some on a left over sheet from a landing craft. The 'A' was a stencilled letter though so the gaps were carefully painted in. Next I painted the crew, which were the two SHQ miniatures, a Dart Castings figure and a plastic Faller aircraft maintenance figure, which following a little limb bending sits nicely on the hull with his head in the engine compartment. The figures in the pictures have had some further highlights and details added but other than that it is ready to go on the layout.





Alexandra Palace Model Railway Show

A visit to the Alexandra Palace Model Railway show is always a good day out and invariably quite expensive. I went along with the vague hope that I could pick up a C class, 2 Hal or even a E4 but the only sign of any of these was the C class in the Bachmann display cabinet. In fact all the trade stands were extremely low on Hornby stock and I didn't see a Hornby stand either.  Therefore it was mainly scenic purchases for the layout rather than rolling stock. 

 

The low rise buildings to the left of my station will be like those at East Croydon, which also happen to be almost identicle to the Wills kits, which I managed to pick up at Warley. Originally I was going to scratch build these based on the shops near the Reigate level crossing but when I saw how close the Croydon shops were to the Wills kit, why reinvent the wheel? Therefore I found myself heading to Langley Models to peruse their shop detailing kits. I subsequently purchased the ironmongers, the mangle with tin bath and the bakers sets. 


I also bought some additional gas lamps for the station and some lamps with a twist for the previously mentioned street. Generally I'm not keen on the Langley's figures of people but the ironmongers are good enough to put outside the shop watching the broken down tank (post to follow). Others may get put inside doorways or find themselves cut down and used as passengers.


My final purchase from Langley was a fret of man hole covers and drains. I think this is often overlooked on layout roads and adds just a little extra detail and realism.


Another purchase was a packet of the Wills bill poster hoardings to use as gap fillers and I will use the workman figure as a painter and decorator repainting one of the shop fronts rather than obligatory pasting up of the bill board.


The next items were several packets of Wills paving stones with curbs, which the larger sheets of paving stones do not have. I didn't know Wills did these when I built my bridge and consequently cut all my own curb stones. The sprues were a little deceptive in the packet as they looked like single strips of straights with an undercut to slid under buildings and two corner sections. When you open the packet you see this is in fact two straight sections folded back to back but offset due to the moulding lugs.


I then bought a few card buildings from Freestone Model Accessories to fill up the empty areas where some of the later scratch built buildings will go. These are hopefully quick build models which will add 3D structures and colour to otherwise blank areas of the layout. If you have read my other articles you will know that I like the Scalescenes kits and I still think these look excellent but with the additional detail comes additional build time, which I am not prepared to invest on temporary buildings.


Finally I have been wanting to get hold of the Cambrian SR Borail Bogie Rail Wagon kits for some time and managed to purchase two at the show. These will go nicely with the ballast hoppers, plank wagons, Dance Hall brake van and a Wills E6, to give me a permanent way train which is entirely kit built. These have now been built and will be the subject of a later post once I have painted them.