CNR Decoder Day
The Model Railway Show Blog
by Trevor
1M ago
Tuning up five locomotives is a pretty good day in the shop I’ve been focusing a lot recently on items already in my collection. As a result, I spent a full day in the workshop this week, upgrading the DCC decoders in several HO scale Canadian National Railways diesels. It was time well spent. Here’s what I did… CNR 2113 (HR-616): HR-616 2113 Bombardier built 20 of these in 1982 for the CNR (road numbers 2100-2119). They introduced the CN-designed “draper taper” cowl car body. Sadly, Canadian National was the only customer for this model and they had a short lifespan, with all retired from the ..read more
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Eustis Forneys (plus a rail auto)
The Model Railway Show Blog
by Trevor
1M ago
Back when I had a Maine On2 layout, this locomotive (Sandy River & Rangeley Lakes 21, nee-Eustis 7) was my go-to motive power. I should give it a chance to run again. Many years ago, before diving into the 1:64 modelling pool, I built a freelanced model railway based on the two-foot gauge lines in Maine. I wrote a lot about my Maine On2 layout in the pages of Railroad Model Craftsman magazine – and then, about 10 years after embarking on that adventure, I tore down the layout and packed it all up to focus on my Port Rowan adventure. But I didn’t get rid of my equipment. I liked the stuff a ..read more
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Great British Train Show 2024
The Model Railway Show Blog
by Trevor
1M ago
GWR 528 on the test track in my workshop One of Canada’s best events dedicated to UK railway modelling is fast approaching and I’m excited that I’ll be there. The Great British Train Show 2024 takes place the last weekend in April at its traditional home in Brampton. I’m fully logistificated, with plane tickets booked and a place to stay arranged. I just have to decide what trains, if any, I’m bringing with me*. The last time I attended a GBTS was in 2018, when I helped my friend Brian Dickey exhibit Roweham, his 7mm Great Western Railway branch line terminal layout. I had so much fun at that ..read more
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A red rocket, right to the childhood
The Model Railway Show Blog
by Trevor
4M ago
I don’t normally promote product announcements – there are so many and these days, they’re usually renderings to gauge expressions of interest. So I rarely even get excited by them, to be honest. But Rapido Trains hit me right in the childhood on Christmas morning with this one. To mark the 70th anniversary of Canada’s first subway, Rapido is planning to release HO scale models of the first equipment ordered by the Toronto Transit Commission. These G Series cars were built by the Gloucester Railway Carriage and Wagon Company in the UK between 1953 and 1959, and ran in service on the Yonge Lin ..read more
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Test track testing
The Model Railway Show Blog
by Trevor
4M ago
I’ve been looking for motivation lately, and I decided to build a new test track for the workshop. I won’t go into details about this project except to say that my previous test track was not sufficient – what with being a three-foot-long set of rails pinned to a plank and set upon the bar in the crew lounge portion of the basement. It wasn’t long enough, the lighting was poor – and it took up space on the bar! Here are a couple of short videos of models running on the new test track, which is more than 10 feet long and lit with an LED strip. I’m still finishing the wiring and have some other ..read more
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GWR 850 haulage test
The Model Railway Show Blog
by Trevor
4M ago
The Lee Marsh Model Company continues to tease its forthcoming models of the Great Western Railway 850 Class… A “short” train. Hot on the heels of an earlier video to demonstrate the DCC sound installation, the company has released this clip of the production sample hauling an impressive rake of wagons on the beautiful 7mm scale Bucks Hill model railway. I’m just going to watch this a few more times ..read more
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Boston & Maine 1150
The Model Railway Show Blog
by Trevor
4M ago
Some redetailing turned an Australian kit into a decent model of a New England doodlebug. Back in the early 2000s when I modelled the Boston & Maine Claremont Branch, I really wanted a model of the railroad’s gas electrics. The problem was, at the time the only mass market option available was a Bachmann model and it didn’t look like the classic EMC designs that I saw in my B&M books. Then, in the pages of the B&M historical society’s magazine, I discovered that Steam Era Models had produced a kit for a similar model. I say similar because Steam Era Models is an Australian company ..read more
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GWR 850 sound test
The Model Railway Show Blog
by Trevor
5M ago
As someone interested in modelling the Great Western Railway, this made my heart go pitter-patter: Sound on! I put down a deposit on one of these (in the GWR’s green, black, and red of course) when the designer – Lee Marsh Model Company – announced them in February, 2019. Given the lead times on brass models, it’s no surprise the project got kicked off schedule by the global pandemic. But it’s now on track again and it’s great to see progress being made. According to Lee Marsh, this production sample now has its DCC gear installed and will head back to the factory so the builder can use it as ..read more
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Take that, you horrible, neutral, forgettable accent pillow!
The Model Railway Show Blog
by Trevor
5M ago
We’re probably all seen ads from real estate developers for their projects. It’s clear from the ads these homes typically feature neutral tones, furniture with clean lines, boring rugs, bland art, stainless steel appliances, etc. If there’s a splash of colour, it’s a bowl of wax fruit or a “daring” accent pillow. Here’s an example of a typical room in a show home, lifted from a video by Australian developer Clarendon Homes for one of their common designs. I picked this deliberately, as I’ll explain shortly… Decor designed to be inoffensive and forgettable. There’s nothing inherently wrong with ..read more
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“A couple more should do it…”
The Model Railway Show Blog
by Trevor
7M ago
This big model now has big sound to match. I needed a break from spiking tie plates for my Proto:48 Southern Pacific layout and I wanted a project I could finish in an afternoon. As I looked around the workshop, the big yellow nose on this 7mm (British 0 scale) model of a Class 37 locomotive was like a red flag to a bull. It was time to add DCC and sound to this beast. I acquired this model as an impulse buy earlier this year. Once it arrived, I went shopping for a suitable decoder and ended up on the DC Kits website. There, I found a Loksound 5 XL with high-bass speaker, preloaded with the ap ..read more
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