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  • #811860
    JasonB
    Moderator
      @jasonb

      3D printing has certainly changed many of the various types of modeling from figures to AFVs to cars/planes. You look to have got the scale about right to go with the “workshop” engines which were never massive.

      Oh and just to further confirm that the  “sticky out” bits are correct even Stuarts offered them as castings for their slightly larger dynamo. The same arrangement is still used today on large electric motors to tension Vee belts. You also need flexible wiring to allow for the adjustment they give not rigid bars or conduit.

      stick out

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      #811861
      Nicholas Farr
      Participant
        @nicholasfarr14254

        Hi, well I like it a lot, yes the switch did look out of place, but the addition of the spares box has really overcome that problem. Well done Richard.

        Regards Nick.

        #811862
        Nicholas Farr
        Participant
          @nicholasfarr14254

          Hi, the sliding runners shown in JasonB’s photo above are still used today, but in the picture, the one on the belt/chain side, should be the opposite way round to the other side, this is so that adjustment can be put on to the dynamo or motor on that side, and the opposite side will counteract the twisting effect of the belt/chain during the adjustment, and during loading in use. In industry, machines always seem to have sticky out bits.

          Regards Nick.

          #811863
          Charles Lamont
          Participant
            @charleslamont71117

            Well, I think you have done an excellent job of restoration and presentation. Thank you for taking the trouble to post it. This forum would be more interesting if more of us showed our work.

            #811870
            Richard Simpson
            Participant
              @richardsimpson88330

              Many thanks for the comments gents.  I eventually decided on a scale of 1/19th for the figures.  I think there is a fair degree of leeway but I thought 16mm was a reasonable size to give the engines an imposing feel while still having a large enough figure for detailed painting.  Doll’s house figures would have looked too big and been in danger of becoming the subject.

              #811878
              martin haysom
              Participant
                @martinhaysom48469
                On cogdobbler Said:
                On SillyOldDuffer Said:

                Excellent, just what I like with my breakfast coffee.  Hard to date, could have been made almost any time in the 20th Century because Stuart have been going for donkeys years.  Ditto Meccano, who provided the chain and sprocket wheels.

                May I suggest three minor improvements, replacing parts out of character with the rest.  Nothing difficult, and they offend my eye!

                improvements

                The switch at arrow ‘A’ is clearly designed for human fingers, and its scale is wrong for the model.  And the d*mn thing being bright and shiny catches the eye.    Nothing that size and shape existed in an engine house!  Could be hidden round the back or replaced with a simple home-made brass knife switch scaled to match the man.

                The plastic twin cable connected to the dynamo is also a bit out of place, though only a pendant might notice!   First, wiring is never run at anything other than a right-angle, so drop it straight down to a new hole in the floor.   Second, plastic insulated wire could be replaced with shiny brass strip or thick copper wire.   Both look more like the open busbars found in early electrical installations, and would match the look of the steam installation.

                The way the dynamo is fixed to the floor looks odd to me.  No Aluminium in early engine rooms!   The sticky out feet are unnecessary and the mounting seems over-complicated.  Might be a poor implementation – an old dynamo I saw in Wales had a similar arrangement, except it the slim Aluminium in the model was replaced by a hefty balk of timber, a good way of reducing vibration on the cheap.  I’d be happier if the model dynamo were bolted straight to the floor, or the Aluminium was disappeared by painting it black!

                Sorry to be a fuss-pot, but minor anachronisms stand out in a first-class job!

                OMG, I’ve turned into Inspector Meticulous.  Nurse, where’s my medication…

                🙂

                Dave

                 

                 

                 

                 

                And you wonder why model engineering (and this site) is failing to attract new blood. Prime example right here of the type of armchair nitpicking and negativity that has not only discouraged newcomers but also driven away many of the old hands.

                 

                 

                well said

                #811887
                parovoz
                Participant
                  @parovoz

                  Lovely job. You turned an old and much neglected model into a real exhibition piece. And I like the tool box trick…. The last wee details just elevated the whole thing. Super work, and I do like the figures. And I agree, much better than ‘dolls house’ the realism just adds to the whole effect.

                  Thanks for sharing.

                  #811893
                  duncan webster 1
                  Participant
                    @duncanwebster1

                    Well I think it’s very nice indeed. Just one question, not a nit pick. Why 1:19 for the figures? Are they commercial, can I get 1:12 anywhere?

                    #811894
                    JasonB
                    Moderator
                      @jasonb

                      Dolls house figures are typically 1/12th but not always very scale looking. 1/19th comes from 16mm:ft which would allow garden railway items to be used. But as said the company will print to whatever size you like.

                      There are also a lot of online sources where you can now just purchase a “file” and then print your own figure at whatever size you like, or phone a friend if you don’t have a printer. You can even use an image of yourself so the final figure looks like you. One example

                      #811895
                      Richard Simpson
                      Participant
                        @richardsimpson88330

                        Duncan, as I explained earlier the figures come from an outfit, ModelU, who will 3D print them to your chosen scale.  I worked out what the height of the figure would be for different scales, cut a piece of wood to that length and moved it around the engines to get a feel for what a figure would look like against them.  I didn’t want the figure to be so small as to be insignificant so discounted 1/32nd and 1/35th, and I didn’t want then so big as to run the risk of becoming too dominant and hence the main subject, such as 1/12th.

                        I decided that 1/19th looked just right so I had them printed at that scale.  1/19th isn’t as odd as it sounds, it is a commonly used scale for military figures where they call it 16mm.

                        If you want to buy 1/12th scale figures the best source are doll’s house suppliers.  I have used resin doll’s house figures a number of times over the years, mainly as there is a wealth of detail accessories available to suit.

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