This week I 'av mostly been shopping.
For a while a friend has lobbied me to get an A4 for the express goods. Now I don't particularly like A4s, in fact I've yet to find a streamlined steam engine that I like, so it's been easy to dodge this request. It did get me thinking though that something green might look well amongst all the black. So I went shopping for a pacific and ended up with this, advertised as spares or repair.
It's Hornby's take on Tornado and cost me thirty three quid plus another fifteen for a set of wheels (the drive gear on the centre axle was knackered) and a tender underframe (one side was missing on the model, why?) I've had to fabricate where part of the front buffer beam has snapped off, likewise the rear half of the reversing rod. Still to do are a set of front footsteps which presumably became broken at the same time as the buffer beam. The major job in backdating the model will involve the tender body as the coal space and rear deck are wrong for a twentieth century A1.
In time I hope to turn the bits on the bench into a reasonable facsimile of Silurian, one of three A1s shedded at York for their entire working lives.
Compromises will have to be made, for example the tender will be missing it's rivets, but the layout is one glorious compromise anyway. As a layout loco I can quite happily live with this in the same way that I'm happy that my NMBS class 81 is flawed but looks like an 81.
But why take this route when I could go out and buy a Bachmann A1? Well I've saved a few quid, but more importantly I like the notion of repairing broken stuff and the more of me in a project then the more I like/value it.