Monday, 30 March 2026

Intro

 The why and wherefore

 


Finding a back story can be problematic, the profile must be a very small station in Thuringia preferably on the northern edge of Thuringia Forest, an area bounded by Ilmenau, Grossbreitenbach und Bad Blankenburg region is known for its exposed rocks, pretty villages and scenery, add numerous venues for refreshment.
 
 

There are a number of branchlines, although many have been long closed, The Köditzberg–Königsee railway (KKB) was a railway line in the district of Saalfeld-Rudolstadt in Thuringia, which connected the city of Königsee to the railway networkShortly after the opening, voices from the industry were heard, which demanded an extension of the railway line beyond Königsee to Gehren in the west to the Ilmenau–Großbreitenbach railway.  
 
The line to Grafenwalde was completed in 1910, it was classed as a Kleinbahn with an initial weight limit of just 12t, which was upgraded in 1917 to 16,8t in order to accomodate the T9.3 that supplemented the line's T3 which pulled a BCPwPosti that 

Lindner built in 1912 for the line's owners.

 
 From 1962, a diesel locomotive of the V15 series operated until the closure together with a Wismar TypB railbus locally known as Molly.

 

Layout

 

The layout



Buildings

The ‘inspiration’ for the station was not located in Thuringia but it is built in the Prussian style, common enough in many areas. On such a small layout there are just a few complete structures, the station group and loco shed.




Sunday, 6 July 2025

Local trains

 
 
 


 
  
 Ebeleben


DR 195 603-6 Bwiq / ex DR VS 145 014
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Workbench

 

In 1912, the BCPwPosti was supplied by Lindner to the KKK (Kleinbahn Köditzberg–Königsee) where it was used a combination vehicle on the line until closure. The model is a kit from Lok-Schlosserei

 

Currently being completed

 

 


 

This is an ongoing narrative about a Fleischmann BR64 that was purchased on eBay

 DSO Modellbahn Forum 

As received

 


The mechanism 

After soaking for 48hrs in Dettol

 
Spare body 
 
Unfortunately the seller's description did not mention that the decoder was completely dead, Brian at BLW Technical Services has sent a mini-decoder.


The awful body of the 2-6-2t spent the weekend soaking in Dettol. The result was far better than feared, I need to remove the residual layers but whoever spent €400+ on details spoilt a really neat model by a shitty paint job. I have a compressor powered abrasive airbrush sold as to nail artists, it should do the trick.
 

Hopefully I can remove everything then repair and replace the broke/missing bits before leaving it alone to completely dry and use rattle cans as it is just a black model.

The chassis should be fixable, the wonky rear buffer beam needs help, it is overwidth which is one of the many problems that a carefully wielded file might fix. Need to check the motor, does it still function?

I may well be out of my depth but I see the potential.


More to follow


 

The body was left on the radiator overnight, it has received a good rub with a brush to remove the worst of the paint. Only now can the extent of the upgrade by the original owner be seen.
 
 
 

 
  
Just a few minutes later

 
Pre-wash
 
Post-wash
 
Test fitting using the spare body
 


From DSO
 



Projekt

Projekt



One day this will return to the layout

 
It has gone to the Netherlands to be rebuilt. CLICK HERE
 

The SVT as it is now, too many problems that require new wheels, motor, decoder, however it is able to be repaired/upgraded. 

 
The new motor
 
 


Wiring done... 

Keeping the original bulbs as they work just fine, including the interior lights. All connected to a function output, so you can choose whether to turn them on or off.
The original bulbs are rated 16V and only get a half wave as i don't use the blue wire on the decoder but the chassis as a return (connected to the rails).




The background 

It is intended to recreate the SVT 137’s one-off visit to the Rennsteig in September 1951. Please note that Frauenwalde is not a replica, but simply a fond tribute to the small railways of the Thuringian Forest. The unique journey of a three-carriage SVT 137 from Berlin to the Rennsteig in September 1951. Here it is stopping at Ilmenau-Bad station on the return journey. The second gentleman from the right is the driver, Mr Schmidt, the railway manager of Frauenwalde and current train dispatcher, and the owner of the Berlin travel agency Tramando and current tour guide, Mr Ellersiek.
 

 
Some more background 

Parallel to the development of the Hamburg design, the three-car Breslau variant, later renamed Leipzig, was being developed for planned use in East Prussia and Silesia. These cars featured, for the first time, third-class seating, a larger kitchen, and a sideboard. Catering was to be provided by Mitropa, as usual. Like the Hamburg design, the three-car train ran on Jacobs bogies. The new Maybach GO 6 diesel engine was chosen as the power unit. While retaining the same basic design principles as the GO 5 engine, it delivered an increased output of 600 hp through exhaust gas turbocharging. This power increase was essential for building the three-car train, which also had a top speed of 160 km/h.

Two SVT railcars were ordered from Linke-Hofmann-Busch in Breslau following the four two-car Hamburg-type vehicles with operating numbers 137 153-154 a/ b/c. The delivery contract 03.077/24.314 was concluded on July 25, 1934. Both vehicles, according to company overview drawing TK 5100 r, were to be delivered with hydrodynamic power transmission, a technology largely developed by Triebwagenbau AG Berlin. A year later, the order was expanded to include two further vehicles with electric transmission, which received the operating numbers 137 233-234. The delivery contract 03.966/24.315 was concluded on June 21, 1935. The railcars largely corresponded to the hydraulically operated version in terms of their structural components, and were therefore included under the same drawing sheet number. Although ordered much later, the diesel-electric cars according to company overview drawing VTe 422 c were delivered before the hydraulic cars; however, their acceptance was delayed until mid-1936


Random images of the damage to the model









The model is about 40-50 years old, dimensionally accurate but the materials were not as good as contemporary western products nevertheless it is worth saving.

This link is interesting:-  Rebuilding the SVT137