A surprise addition: 08202…
I didn’t mean to create a miniature of 08202. Yes, she lives here (at present, on loan from the Avon Valley), but as a vacuum braked example with the early hinged door she didn’t fit in my Speedlink era collection…
However, that was before I found this photo (after seeing something similar on page 94 of Michael Rhodes’s ‘The Railways of South Wales 1975 - 1995, Part 1 - Cardiff and the Valley Lines’). Here 08202 is seen, on loan to the coal board, at Cwmbach, sorry Deep Navigation.
The similarity in this almost sylvan scene to how I pictured the yard at Cwmbach is remarkable. Green everywhere, even here is shouldn’t be, ash ballast and rakes of similar but not identical wagons…
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| Hired BR class 08 shunting locomotive number 08202 is seen in action at Deep Navigation Colliery on 7th August 1987 with some HEA wagons. Mike Jones photo, Flickr: https://flic.kr/p/2rLYAXJ |
Another Farish 08 was sourced, along with a ‘Basra’ body being sold cheaply on eBay. I needed a bodyshell with the door hinge straps - and it was a lot cheaper to modify this older tooling to fit the new chassis than to source one of the new toolings with them. The later coreless motor and speaker fitted chassis intrudes into the cab area a touch. It’s easiest to cut the cab area from the body, along the groove the cab clips in to, and then open out each half with a file offering them frequently to the chassis to check.
In addition to that, this example also needed the front equipment cabinet removing - as I had done with the RMS Locotec example. New doors were easily fabricated and blended in but the hinges were more problematic. These slivers of styrene are tiny, and more representative than accurate.
To get the faded finish I use Precision ‘faded rail blue’ gut added some Humbrol 28. I used Humbrol 69 with a touch of the same for the yellow ends, before detail painting, decals and then re-assembly. Once back together and sealed with lacquer the weathering was the usual ‘98/33’ washes - and since the photos were taken, some gun-metal dry brushed on the steps.
This isn’t just another blue 08, there is no such thing. Each unique in character through placement of warning flashes to the way dirt clings to them. I used period photos to make sure these details were right for I’m not modelling the present, but the 80s on Cwmbach. That means original buffers and black buffer beams - but a few liberties too, for example the fly cranks are black to hide their overscale size.
Even as I write this, another of these venerable little models is taking shape on the bench. I seem to have a bit of a thing for them, they run so beautifully, take up little space too in the grand scheme of things. A mix of depot pets and mundane blue allow me to ring the changes. Cwmbach itself now has 3 (the cut down 08993, the RMS on hire - depicting the early nineties, and now 08202) which is probably enough but there is always scope on Paxton Road… I fancy a Railfreight large logo one next…
Until next time, more soon…
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Great stuff, James!
ReplyDeleteI've always loved the 350hp Shunter in its various forms...and happily, the DFR has several in various states so it's not too far for me to go and get my fix.
I saw Chris Hopper's new 00 micro layout "Bitley Mill" the other day, and one of the locos in use was a sound fitted 08, which really added to the atmosphere. I was never really that struck on sound, but this goes some way to changing my mind...
I think the only 08 I've got at the moment is a green one with wasp stripes, bought for Fidley and likely to stay as it is with a little weathering. I really must do some more with my N gauge, first priority being to build and fit some of the stash of DG couplings.
Cheers,
Simon.
I have a pair of sound fitted 08s, in N. They’re good fun, and do have a certain play value. They run beautifully too…
DeleteGood luck with the DG, forming the loop is east enough but adding magnetic droppers is one for some relaxing music, eye protection and magnification and a lot of patience!
Hi James. 08113 was a relatively long lived 08 in industrial use too. After it left St Blazey it ended up in South Wales after being withdrawn 1984(?) It was certainly an RMS industries loco till 1996. You have two decent industrial 08's!
ReplyDeleteYes, I think 08113 ended up at Coed-Bach for a time, in the Powell Duffryn white blue livery… and yes, with the RMS one it’s nice to ring the changes on the as yet, unborn layout!
DeleteThat photo of Deep Navigation is wonderfully evocative, as even is the place name itself. In a way it reminds me of PMP's Shelfie 2
ReplyDeleteIsn’t it just!
DeleteI love the monotony of the wagons…
What a wonderful photo. I can spend hours looking at photos of industrial scenes like that. I often think there is a lot of similarities between the South Wales coalfield and that of my own County Durham and Northumberland. That special mix of highly industrial infrastructure but in a rural setting. It is so evocative. The 'living' locomotives coexisting with nature. All sadly lost now.
ReplyDeleteI love the Gordon Edgar books for that reason, but it is the interface with British Rail that has become more of a muse in recent years and Michael Rhodes new books from Platform 5 on South Wales and the North East are packed full of evocative images…
DeleteThanks James.
DeleteI too am a massive fan of the Gordon Edgar books. I've got the full set (apart from the South West one which has frustratingly evaded me!). I can lose myself for hours in them.
I'll have to check out those Platform 5 books. I hadn't spotted them, so thanks for the tip off.