The Facebook group Modelling German Railways has just re-booted itself and is open for new members - click here
The Facebook group Modelling German Railways has just re-booted itself and is open for new members - click here
This was the first attempt at depicting rural power supplies on Grafenwalde in 2004, the image caused apoplexy on RMweb forum.
It is important to show the correct details, from the front the overhead line at the tower station would first go to the upper insulators and then be braced with the lower insulators. In between (soldered) it goes into the house. Low voltage as an overhead line then on the left (nx four conductors). There should be a yellow warning sign on the door and below it on a white background the name of the supplier.
The small farm comprises of a low house and a small yard separated by a railway line.
A small Franconian farm labourers' home
The Faller farm labourer's cottage is a bit too small, although it bears a distant resemblance to the Häcker family home in Ergersheim, which is preserved as building 12 in the Franconian Open Air Museum in Bad Windsheim. However, a new homemade version is urgently needed.
Perhaps it would be possible to create a model that is 25 mm longer; these archive images show the original building and its proportions.
The building is a half-timbered structure with a stucco façade, built around 1706.
Click here for a link to the museum description.
Please note that I am very grateful to the Bad Windsheim Museum for providing the images, without which it would have been almost impossible to start this project.
The cottage garden has a couple of fruit trees, vegetable garden and chicken coop.
Other than the Agenturgebäude, the next type of station building used by the KBayStsB was the Würfel, so named as it resembled a cube, their size was generally dependant on the importance of the community served by the station.
For example Ebern covers an area of 95 square kilometres (37 sq mi) within which are 18 villages as well as the town of Ebern itself and is relatively modest whilst other locations demanded a larger building.
However kits for these types of buildings have been somewhat elusive until Faller and Noch introduced two laser cut examples
Smaller buildings examples require some effort