Hi DaveIan, that really is a superb picture....
Merry Christmas to you and Martina.
Cheers Dave.
Thanks Dave. You've raised an interesting question I don't know the answer to.Lovely work and a very impressive looking layout in progress. As you say, the railings are an interesting feature with good attention to detail.
I wonder what the purpose was in having some posts "open"? They appear to be spaced quite randomly.
Dave.
Hi IanI’ve never really been convinced that mass produced pointwork captures the flow of the prototype very well. It’s one of the reasons I changed to EM gauge, somewhat spookily, from N gauge! Dave Frank’s pointwork on Wharfeside 4mm - Wharfeside, a lifetime's project demonstrates “the flow“ perfectly, much better than my own efforts.
I’d assumed they were cast iron. Possibly different patterns with same hole spacing, though I’d have expected them to be all the same. I doubt they’d have corroded through, the typical ones on promenades, open to winter storms & salt water etc seem to last a century or so…Thanks Dave. You've raised an interesting question I don't know the answer to.
My original assumption was that they were all solid, then corroded. The "single legged" post in the Transport Treasury image seems to discount that, as I would have expected them all to have corroded at the same rate, so it is unusual in being a one-off.
At the time of the TT photo, they would have been in that location for @55years. What sort of condition would they be in after 55years in an acid rain environment, assuming they hadn't been somewhere else first? Were the solids are the replacements for corroded opens....?
it gets further complicated, if you go the other side of the bridge, where the height difference between the goods and passenger stations was greater. The same style of railing exists, with what appears to be predominantly open posts nearest the camera. I guess at the end of the day, the company originally went for the cheapest manufacturing option
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