Friday 10 July 2020

Forging ahead slowly




I have several new products finally coming together. I have spent some time trying to finish things off around work and normal family life in these COVID times.

Long wheelbase T vans are at the casters now (see photo) and will be available in plain and with signage as an optional extra. Initially, Tancred Bros and VIMA will be available and then followed by William Angliss meats.

Arriving from the etchers will be T3, 4 and 5 series commonly known as the low nose, H and the high cab with later series long hood style. Sorry, but the low nose T and H are already pre-ordered and I’ll have to get more soon as I can get more decals.

Also arriving in the etch will be a very limited number of W’s to fit the terrier mech that will be re-released by Dapol later in the year.  The kit will feature 3D body, etch parts, decals and laser cut items.  Yes, there is room for a decoder and weight!

The website will be updated soon with new SOH figures as I have been steadily increasing the no of kits held.



Happy modelling during these COVID times
Chris

Sunday 17 May 2020

Everything at once

I have to cool my heels whilst I spend some time restocking for orders I’m trying to fill as I have in my hot little hand eches for the Ys, flat top Ts and high nose Ts.

 Also, I have the trial eches for the later series Ts and along with the W class.



Happy modelling Chris Pearce

Monday 23 March 2020

New kits now and on the way

Self-isolate and build kits instead

I'm slowing getting some kits together at last as my Carpal Tunnel Syndrome is easing up a bit but still there. 

First to be released is the Victorian Railways QR in a 2 pack. It is a laser-cut card/timber kit with a heavy brass weight. $55.00.  It is relatively easy to build over an hour or so. Just supply bogies (Archbar available for $6.50 a pair), shunter steps and couplers. 

The QR’s were some of the first bogie wagons on the VR system.  Construction started in 1890 and continued up until 1930.  This kit is based on the 3-door version which covers the number range 1-376 and 407.

Originally, they were equipped with spindly bar frames that and eventually changed over to the more familiar later series bar frames.  Others had plate frame bogies as well as the normal roller bearing that was available.  Being a go-anywhere wagon they could be seen over the entire VR system until their usefulness dwindled in later years but found a new lease of life as works trains conveying sleepers and gravel.  Towards the end of their life, they received the four-letter coding VOWA but not the many received the check digit.  With the 1980s upon the railways and wholesale scrapping of older wagons, the class met that same fate as many other older and obsolete wagons the Victorian Railways deemed of no use.


The next kit that will be available is the bogie LL/LF sheep wagon. Construction is very similar to the L wagon kits produced previously.  These will be available as a 2 pack and as various types of bogies were used I will leave it up to the modeller to chose their own. Couplers and shunter steps will be needed also.

LF construction started in 1928 and a total of 50 were built.  There are two compartments to each wagon allowing a different consignee to fill an end each.  The bogie version of the L wagon allowed it to utilised on freight around the state and 10 were fitted with BX fast passenger bogies and classed LP.  They were in use up to the mid-1980s and received the four-digit coding VSAY.

They spent virtually their entire life moving from country towns in block trains to Newmarket and Brooklyn processing plants. Between 1931-33, the entire fleet was converted over to auto couplers. Early in the 1970s, a live sheep deal with Saudi Arabia saw a large number of trains transhipping to Portland for overseas travel. By 1986 very few wagons were left in service as wholesale scrapping had already begun and with livestock trains finally ceasing in October 1986 the remaining units were scrapped.



Remember to stay safe and self isolate. Why not build kits instead! Chris