4mm & 7mm Llanfair

Yorkshire Dave

Western Thunderer
I like the way, Larry, that the track turns towards the buffers. I’ve seen this so many times on the prototype and wondered why the track didn’t just continue in a straight line. Most realistic.

I would hazard a guess with the prototype this would have been down to the major constraint of existing property boundaries, the willingness of landowners to sell, the land acquired and the eventual space available to build upon.

In the grand scheme of things property boundaries have rarely changed since the 5,200+ enclosures acts passed between 1604 and 1914. The majority were passed from the 1750s onwards forcing labourers from the land to seek work in the growing towns and cities thereby helping fuel the industrial revolution.
 

LarryG

Western Thunderer
Well, I'm really into modelling again now. A friend living not a million miles away from my home knew an expensive DCC sound-fitted loco plonked on my Code 100 track would have the desired affect!

All the stored Code 75 track was dusted down and only four yards of Bullhead had to be purchased. A darker speckled grey ballast is being used this time. Also the track plan is simpler by using the "mainline" as a headshunt and in fact is more compact...

WEB Llanfair26 1.jpg
 
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LarryG

Western Thunderer
Amazing how all these years later one can still see evidence of an old broad gauge siding in the yard (note sleeper undulations in the yard surface).
Brunel actually carried out a broad-gauge survey of the branch between Welshpool and Llanfair, the other surveys being standard gauge. The line was eventually constructed narrow gauge of course, but I've chosen one of the standard gauge plans, with embellishments!

The line from Shrewsbury to Welshpool is joint LNWR/Cambrian anyway, but my 'history' is the LNWR insisted on a heavily built formation, which was normal for them, and so the branch to Llanfair is the same. Gives me the opportunity to run an Austerity 2-8-0.
 
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