Sunday 7 July 2024

A journey from here to there

 personal philosophy 

In order to be a modeller of railways there needs to be a model railway. It doesn't matter if it is a loft or an Ikea box, there has to be a railway, otherwise we are mere collectors of things in boxes.

Occasionally, a thought begins to become a concern, why build a model railway and why choose a particular subject? My obsession, for it is an obsession, is to create something naturalistic that pleases the eye and restores old memories of quiet rural railways of Southern Germany. 

I greatly admire those individuals who devout a lifetime to build a perfect representation of a actual location, set at a specific time/date. Their dedication is admirable but there are constraints, as they can utilise space and have access to information, neither of which I enjoy. By contrast, my world is one of limited to just 5m x 1m and limited information from both the internet and the few books that feature my chosen subject.

My project is based upon a notion that a modest rural line in Oberfranken  had been extended a few more kilometres before funding was finally exhausted and the planned wayside station became a terminus for the remainder of its short life.

The generic trackplan is simple, the only extravagance is a tiny wooden loco shed with fuel+water and the style of the station buildings is typical of the builder. 

Various features (LDEs) from around the location are recycled, all chosen for their similarity to other local features. Colours are carefully chosen from a palette used in the location, mostly natural, a mix of greens + earth, subtle rather than brash. 

The stock was carefully selected with help from local experts, there are no 'special' visitors as everything must have been used on rural lines within 25kms during the timeframe 1950-68. 

The wherefore of operation on Pottendorf
 
The layout in the shed is small, only about 3,4m of scenic area with four storage roads, this means that it is a shunting puzzle rather than ‘parade’ style layout. Four is the magic number as there were just four trains per day on a typical branch in the mid ‘50s. 
 
The stocklist reflects the purpose of the layout, just a few wagons and coaches plus a railbus are the four trains that shuffle backwards and forwards. The wagons form two trains, the coaches another with the railbus as the simple shuttle that does not shunt at all. 
 
Each of the four scenic roads has at least one uncoupler, the platform has two so that after uncoupling from the head of the train, the loco can pick off vehicles from the train and set them into sidings. 
 
Running through all four trains should take about 25-30 minutes of intense concentration, enough to keep me happy.

I hope that this explains the approach.

Monday 17 June 2024

Couplings

Hi,

 Just a personal opinion but are Kadees the go-to couplings? 

 The big layout is not intended for public display but the micro-diorama is most definitely for the public. The two have very different requirements i.e. about thirty items of rolling stock (the passenger in fixed rakes) and just four wagons for t’other.

Rather than Kadees for both, maybe a version of the Piko and fit the vestigial hook (Weinert sell them) or the oHfine coupling (above) to locos? Uncoupling either by micro-magnet on a stick lifting the loop or bent piece of plastic (Maerklin sell them) lifting the loop from below. An alternative, is simply to remove the loop from a standard coupling on the loco which isn’t a chore and makes uncoupling much easier. Try removing the loop from one end of each wagon except the wagon at the far end of the train, leave both in place, it works perfectly on my BLT. 

Piko/Maerklin standard coupling

Why, because I prefer to couple wherever I choose rather than fixed locations and it gives me a reason to get physically involved with operation (I am the duty shunter) AND because Piko’s coupling in whatever fitting is the industry standard and no need for surgery to delicate older models.

Below is an image of a magnetic uncoupler being used on Piko couplings, I would remove the loop at the rear coupling except the last vehicle on my BLT. 

Uncoupling solutions

Piko/Maerklin

A magnet on a stick

 

 
Uncoupling solutions

The Kadee 241 tool

Simple, needs a very steady hand but it is what it is, also try a bamboo meat skewer and the end sharp with a pencil sharpener.

Fitting Kadees

Please visit here first:- Steph Dale's excellent guide to Kadee couplings

Any comment would be welcome.

 Btw, all my previous layouts used Kadees, hence the re-consideration of their suitability for the latest (and last) layout.

Monday 20 May 2024

Beside the road in Bayern

The location of the layout is Oberfranken, Bayern. There are many features that are common to the region and throughout Bayern, these include artefacts related to the catholic faith of Bayern.

Wayside crosses and wayside shrines bear witness to the piety of the people. For hundreds of years, these small religious monuments made of wood, stone and masonry have mostly been erected and maintained by the wayside, some decorated with flowers and candles.

Pottendorf has two such features.


Wednesday 15 May 2024

A loco shed

I have waited almost two years since starting to rebuild Pottendorf to capture this image.
 
 
Other than the station, the other major railway building is the locoshed and its associated facilities. As Pottendorf is lacking a prototype, a simple single road wooden shed was rebuilt from a very old Pola kit
 
 
The locoshed has a small coaling stage and corrugated iron flammable store.
 

 Details such as a water tap outside the locoshed
 

The water crane is a Spitzner type, copied from the example that once stood at Kempten, Bad Neustadt and similar to the one at Miltenberg

Grey Primer
 
98 812 receives water in the morning at Bad Neustadt station to be prepared for the next (return) trip to Königshofen, on 01.07.1968.
 
Older style, unknown location, possibly Endorf
 
 Some inspiration was gatherered from the old loco shed at Kößlarn as that branchline shared many features with other Bayerische nebenbahnen. The loco shed was at the opposite end of the station yard and was surrounded on three sides by long grass, it still survives despite being abandoned by the DB.
 






Tuesday 7 May 2024

The cottage

On the latest version of Pottendorf there is a small cottage for the farmworker, it has a couple of fruit trees, vegetable garden and chicken coop.

 

The Faller cottage has a vague similarity to the Häcker family house from Ergersheim preserved as building 12 at the Fränkische Freilandmuseum in Bad Windsheim. Rather scratchbuilding maybe just the removal of the lower level of fachwerke?

 


These archive images show the original building and its original proportions.


The building is a timberframe built around 1706 and an external stucco finish on the lower section of the walls .

Link to the museum's description click here

 
The cottage, below is a new kit that was reworked. There really wasn’t too much scope the lengthen the building as the sub-base of the scene is finished but it has lost the fachwerk (timber framing) below the top of the ground floor windows. It has been carefully stipled with AK Interactive Terrains acrylic, a texture normally used for roads etc.

I am fine with its actual size although it is about 30% too short compared to the Häcker family house but all other dimensions are 1:87 moreover buildings of this size were once common until the '70s when living in a two down one up became unacceptable. 
 

Although unfinished, the result will be acceptable
 
 


 At the bottom of the cottage garden, there are some chickens
 

Tim

Sunday 21 April 2024

Building the layout

The blog is about building a small fictitious terminus vaguely based on other small stations in Oberfranken, instead it is merely an amalgam of features of existing locations in the areaa plausible fiction.

Oct 2022 
It began with four old baseboards that were cleaned and prepared for new track
 

Mar 2023 Track laid and fully wired

 
February 2024 
The platform receives a coat of Acrylmasse textured light grey paint and the roads and station yard have been repainted with limestone paint and layer of Acrylmasse.
 
 
 All the track has been ballasted, ready for testing
 
April 2024 
The backscene is finally in place


May 2024
The edge along the backscene is mostly complete, it is patchy were the PVA failed to 'grab' the static grass, the rest of the grass was secured with MattMedium.

Finally, the front edge nears completion, just a few untouched patches to be covered, tomorrow, trains will be running.


Perhaps worth mentioning that 'Pottendorf' represents a station during a rather wet ‘60s late summer and it is in its final months of existence, lack of maintenance has resulted in a general unkempt appearance.

June 2024
Starting to plant the trees, ten in total


  

At the end of the track
 
 
 
 
It is a lantern from Auhagen 41618, not easy to assemble nor easy to install. A shallow slot had to made in the trackbed and it is held in place by the white PVA glue. There are six on Pottendorf.
 

Friday 8 March 2024

Goods for Potttendorf

The goods traffic is based on a small terminus in Oberfranken, logs and sugar beet were loaded in the yard. 

 
 
 

Something is needed to shift the sugar beets into wagons in the yard. The Hanomag wheeled front loader was first introduced in the early ‘60s and was fundamental in the change in material handling. At first it had no weather protection for the driver but regulations changed and a simple protective cab was available from the late ‘60s onwards. 

The image below is a simple upgrade of the basic Wiking model


 
Timber 
 
The sidings would have been used for shifting other actual local products, timber but 50 years ago loading was achieved wiith ingenuity and mandraulics as the only methods. 

A couple of choice images:-

Another local product was ceramics, a local speciality, (Pottendorf is a corruption of ‘village of pots’) these were sent in wooden crates by van traffic attached to passenger workings.

Wednesday 14 February 2024

Scenery

Fränkische Schweizthe hills and the valleys 

Pottenstein Castle
Around the region







Trees  

 

Trees make all the difference to a layout, they add height, interest and structure. There are over ten trees available to Pottendorf, most made by MBR. They will be 'planted' in groups of three (one large, two small) with the last single tree behind the barns and hiding the exit.

Two of the smaller trees in the farmyard

 
Rocks 


 Fränkische Schweiz is famous for its rocky outcrops such as Pottenstein at the top of the page or little rocks at the side of a field.
 

This is my rock, just after it was given a base coat of matt white
 

The same rock after a simple treatment


 
It has received a thin wash of Yellow Ochre watercolour mixed with some matt medium and water.

The thin wash of W&N Yellow Ochre is migratory and settles nicely in almost every crevice, exactly the same process used on the old station building and the other buildings on P'dorf.