I finally got the transfers on and the glazing in. I just need to refit the buffer heads and couplings and tweak the fit of the straps that hold the door supports in place on the body side.
D&S NER Diag 67 Horsebox ready for weatheringD&S NER Diag 67 Horsebox ready for weathering
Thankfully, it looks like I got away with the partiel repaint. I have also added an additional coat of Johnsons Klear so now I will wait a couple of days for it to fully harden.
Well I managed to make a complete cock up of the transfers on the first side.
I hadn’t got the surface glossy enough and the transfer refused to be nudged. In the end I was a bit vigorous with the cocktail stick that I use to finally position transfers and gouged a bit of paint off.
Here I am trying a partial repaint of the damaged side. As I was stripping the paint from the affected panels I also noted that somewhere along the line I had lost a hinge from the feed/harness compartment so I stripped that door too and soldered on another hinge. Time will tell as to whether I get away with it or I have to strip the whole side or even the entire body.
It’s now ready for paint (actually I primed it last night and added the top coat this morning).
Buffers and couplings are just pushed into place for the photos and the axle boxes still need to be stuck on.
D&S NER Diagram 67 HorseboxD&S NER Diagram 67 HorseboxD&S NER Diagram 67 Horsebox roofD&S NER Diagram 67 Horsebox roofD&S NER Diagram 67 HorseboxD&S NER Diagram 67 Horsebox
Unlike most of the castings in the kit which are really good the Westinghouse and vacuum through pipes were not so good so having checked my stock and finding that I didn’t have any cast ones to hand, I decided to make some. Once fitted and painted they should look the part.
Home made Westinghouse Pipes
They are made from 1.6mm brass rod, brass beading wire, some 2.2mm nickel rod drilled out to create the collars at each end of the wire bound section and some 10thou nickel sheet riveted and cut into strips with my guillotine.
The door dampers also need some way to retain them once the body is fitted to the chassis so again 10 thou nickel sheet riveted and cut into strips.
Door Damper Brackets – NER Diag 67
It needed a bit of experimentation with the rivet spacing because I needed the hollows at the back of the rivets to fit over half etched rivets already in place on the body side.
Back in 2011 when I put the body together despite having scratch built a groom’s seat I soldered the roof on. A couple of years ago I realised that I would never be able to properly paint the groom’s compartment so I removed it again.
As can be seen from my earlier photos it was built before I started using lens tissue to represent canvas on roofs. I wanted to add it and the simplest way to do it was to remove all the roof vents, stick on the tissue and then re-add the vents. I left the two grab handles in place ad worked around them.
NER Diag 67 Horsebox RoofNER Diag 67 Horsebox Roof
I am not sure whether it was because I had removed the roof after originally soldering it on but it no longer fitted as well as it did. In order to improve the fit I soldered a strip of quite thick nickel to the top of each end which filled up the slight gap that was there.
NER Diag 96 Horsebox body
I then started thinking of how to refit the roof after painting. Initially I added a framework using my small vertical belt sander to quickly create the curves to match the roof profile with some angles to brace them apart at the correct distance. On one end I added a fold to hook under the strip on the top with the other end slipping inside the inner wall of the groom’s compartment. It worked but it was not as tight a fit as I would have liked.
NER Diag 67 Horsebox Roof
While conversing with another modeller who is also building a horsebox from a Gladiator kit I had an idea. It’s not the clearest in the photo below but I soldered a curved length of 1.6mm rod to the underside of the roof tight enough so that it would snapp over the end strip and hold in position below it – think of a reversed percent sign %
NER Diag 67 Horsebox bodyNER Diag 67 Horsebox body
That works a treat and is something I plan to develop for fixing other van roofs on going forwards.
I had a look through the instructions for the later NER Diag 196 horsebox earlier to check whether that had brake yokes. The etch doesn’t but the instructions do… Further investigation revealed that Danny does (did?) a separate etch for the brake yokes. I wonder how many more of his kits it was designed to fit. – I have D&S kits for a CLC brake van and a GER special cattle box. The brake van definitely has no yokes. I haven’t had a look at the cattle box yet.
The other question is whether Dan did the etch for the 7mm kits or just the 4mm ones. All the instructions are clearly from the 4mm kits with small footnotes for 7mm
A couple of years before I started this blog, way back in summer 2010 I attended my first Gauge O Guild Show at Halifax. While there I picked up a couple of kits. One of them was a D&S North Eastern Railway Diagram 67 Horsebox. Now I confess that I have always had the thing about horseboxes so I was pleased to pick the kit up.
Although I bought it from a trader and the pack was still heat sealed, I discovered later that it must have been both an early kit and possibly packed on a Friday afternoon.
Fast forward 12 months to 2011 and I started to build it.
This was at the point where I discovered that there were no instructions in the packet. – remember my Friday afternoon comment.
I did have Volume 3 of Historic Carriage Drawings by Peter Tatlow which although it didn’t have a photo of the diagram 67 Horsebox it did have a drawing which showed that the kit was missing castings or etches for the distinctive door dampers.
Mentioning the lack of instructions over on Western Thunder kindly brought me a pdf copy a snip of them is included below to show the door dampers that I referred to.
The instructions made it clear that they were castings rather than etches. I also noted and this is why I believe it was an earlier kit in the D&S range that although there were brakes in terms of shoes and hangers there were no representations for the yokes. I also have a D&S GNR horsebox kit and that does have yokes so perhaps Danny realised what was missing in later designs.
For quite some time I have been steadily working my way through a selection of 3D printed NER wagons for a friend painting and lettering them. The painting was done over time but last week I got stuck into the lettering
NER R3 Coke hopperNER S4 Hopper WagonsNER D1 and D2 Bolster WagonsNER P3 and P4 Hopper WagonsNER P1 and P2 Hopper wagonsNER C2 Open WagonsNER S1 Hopper Wagons
Much of the lettering was done with some custom transfers printed by Precision Labels. They are nice and once you get used to them quite easy to apply but the font is a bit small in my view and could have done with being a couple of points bigger. They are also quite vulnerable to the lettering rubbing off when handling until they are over varnished. Still an interesting exercise as a I wasn’t too familiar with the various NER diagrams.
Before I put the finishing touches to the V1/3 brake vans I finished off the V4
This included adding LNER lettering and then glazing and detail painting. When I built it I had drilled out the buffer stocks to accept proprietary sprung buffer heads, which I put away safe. Sadly in the intervening years safe morphed into lost although I am sure they will appear again at some point. So I did a first for me I turned some replacements from one of the many pieces of steel rod recovered from scrapping a printer. There was one length of just the diameter I needed so off I went.
Shop Turned Buffer heads
Thankfully, I did find the couplings that I had made up at the same time so they were fitted too.
LNER V4 Brake Van
Just a reminder of it’s full interior before I stick the roof on.
Back in 2017 I started a pair of Connoisseur NER V1/3 and an NER V4 Brake vans, which for reasons that I forget, were put aside. Then in 2021 I painted and lettered the the V1/3’s but only painted the V4 which was left unlettered and again they were put aside.
Since setting up my home office I have deliberately left a number of my shelf queens on display in the hope that eventually their unfinished state would irritate me into doing something about them. This last week in preparation for lettering some wagons for a friend I decided that I would get the V4 lettered, more on that later.
I also took the opportunity to glaze and finish the V1/3’s. Having glazed them I noted that the step boards were a bit on the thin side being etched from the same material as the body. Had they still been unpainted I might have soldered a second layer of thin etch strip to the bottoms to beef them up a bit but with them being painted I looked for other options.
I did consider adding coffee stirrers but they would have been too thick and then I remembered that Brian Dale ([USER=1062]@oldravendale[/USER] ) had kindly let me have a bag of offcuts of veneer. Strips of veneer were enough to thicken the step boards without making them appear grossly over scale.
I cut the strips and glued them to the existing steps with pva, holding them in place until they dried with mini wooden clothes pegs. These were bought on a whim from a craft shop thinking that they might be useful at some point.
Ex NER V3 Brake Van with Side CotesEx NER V3 Brake Van with Side CotesEx NER V3 Brake Van with Side Cotes
The body of the tender is built around a fold up cage, I confess that I wasn’t too keen on it initially but it’s growing on me.
All the parts are just rested in place at the moment – The front and rear panels are made up of two half etched faces with a capping strip added after soldering them together. So far I have only fitted the front one together because the front of the rear panel is folded to create the coal space and I haven’t got that far yet.
JLRT Stanier Tender Cage
It was a bit fiddly but I did manage to get the filler cap to open and close.
Stanier Tender Water FillerStanier Tender Water Filler