Neil
Western Thunderer
Though I'm principally motivated to paint, decorate and build cupboards in order to turn smelly hovel into a thing of taste and beauty I have also one eye on an August bank holiday deadline when the slice of Belgium makes it debut in Machynlleth. Therefore grey primer/undercoat has been applied, sanded and applied again to the baseboards.
Here we can see the fiddle yard (it's first appearance here) with a bit more clarity. It shares the same construction as the other two boards, but with a recessed deck to allow for a sector plate which will act both to close the loop and as storage. The deck was in the paint shop when the photos were taken, but the arc where it docks with the rest of the layout is obvious on the connecting end of the board.
I've also tweaked the track a little, in this photo all the fishplates are present including the insulating ones required for wiring up the converted to live frog diamond crossing.
One problem raised it's ugly head, my less than brilliant woodwork had resulted in one of the end pieces being some degrees off vertical, which gave an unwanted gap in the baseboard surface. I tackled this issue by cutting, sanding and chiselling a strip of softwood to fit.
Once shaped the homogenising effect of the grey paint has worked wonders in blending it in to the whole.
I'm now part way through glueing the track down in sections with PVA but the photography has yet to catch up with this phase of work.
Here we can see the fiddle yard (it's first appearance here) with a bit more clarity. It shares the same construction as the other two boards, but with a recessed deck to allow for a sector plate which will act both to close the loop and as storage. The deck was in the paint shop when the photos were taken, but the arc where it docks with the rest of the layout is obvious on the connecting end of the board.
I've also tweaked the track a little, in this photo all the fishplates are present including the insulating ones required for wiring up the converted to live frog diamond crossing.
One problem raised it's ugly head, my less than brilliant woodwork had resulted in one of the end pieces being some degrees off vertical, which gave an unwanted gap in the baseboard surface. I tackled this issue by cutting, sanding and chiselling a strip of softwood to fit.
Once shaped the homogenising effect of the grey paint has worked wonders in blending it in to the whole.
I'm now part way through glueing the track down in sections with PVA but the photography has yet to catch up with this phase of work.