Yes – I too had a thoroughly enjoyable day there, yesterday!
Spent more money than I should have done – on tools – but we've to support our traders.
Apparently, the long queue in the cafeteria at lunch-time was due to two staff members being away, ill. The half-down on duty seemed to get into their stride though, after the first half-hour or so; and the food was of the standard and value I recall enjoying in previous years.
That A4 really is superb – way above my league but very inspiring; and it must be unusual for miniature locomotive's internals to be as faithful to prototype as that example's exhausts.
It was good to see some work by youngsters, too.
Socially, I met fellow model-engineers I know, as I expected but actually spent much of the day in company of two friends from elsewhere whom I never expected to be at a model-engineering show! It transpired one is building a locomotive. We spent a leisurely hour out in the sun, admiring the traction-engines and watching the sawing demonstration. I noticed the railway by its absence.
Just before leaving I sort of became absorbed in a conversation on the SMEE stand, about work-holding. I don't know the names of the two gentlemen involved but for me, informal little "seminars" like that are a valuable aspect of these events.
A long day, a 300-mile round-trip, leaving home at 5am, arriving back at about 9.30 pm after avoiding a road closure inspired the sat-nag to send me along a mystery-tour of North Dorset lanes – though still saving 10 miles on the upwards trip with no closures!
So was it worth it? I thought the show a bit thinner than in previous years, with some of the one-time regulars among the Big Name traders no longer attending these events. Otherwise though, Yes, and I look forwards to next October!
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Other shows?
Alexandra Palace? Has that now gone, killed not least by the congestion-charge that will also affect so many other cultural events – and the local residents and businesses? This was one that annually brought a group of us down from Dorset.
Doncaster? One trip was enough. I enjoyed the exhibition itself, met a few people I know. What put me off was not my mistake of buying a tea and pasty at horsey-set prices; but the sheer difficulty of finding the race-course with no sign-posts, in an unfamiliar city that baffled even the "sat-nag"; compounded by my lack of experience and confidence of driving in cities.
Harrogate? if it goes back there then it's on my calendar! It is 300 miles from home but the venue is easy to find and a lovely place. I attended the exhibitions on the Friday then drove to the Yorkshire Dales for a weekend in my caving-club there; coming home on the Monday. (I am in two caving-clubs, the other being in Somerset.) I did that for Doncaster.