Wednesday, December 10, 2025

Warehouse Wednesday: Oxford roofs

Oxford from the Sheldon Theatre

I found myself the other day, looking out over Oxford, from the top of the Sheldonian Theatre. As I admired the dreaming spires, I pondered how I'd model them if called to. 

And it occurred to me that there were two options. Carefully make one, with a great deal of skill and fiddling, and cast it in resin, or more likely, 3D print the thing as many times as required.  

As a fan of traditional modelling, I'll have to admit that this is one area where printing will score well above carving things out of plastic. That pains me a bit, as I'd like my modelling to take place somewhere other than on a screen - I spend more than enough time staring into one as it is! 

However, this fits my idea that this is another technology that is a useful tool, an addition to the modellers toolbox as it were. Fortunately, I'm not likely to modelling central Oxford in the near future, so I don't have to worry too much right now...

Incidentally, while in the Theatre, I tried on a mortarboard.

All the ones on offer were too small. So, it turns out it was a good job I was too thick to go to university - I'd not be able to graduate, because I couldn't fit in the hat!
 

Tuesday, December 09, 2025

Heat and hammering

 

Last week, I mentioned a nice four-wheel wagon I've picked up. The wheels were set to 32mm gauge, but I felt it would be more use to me in 45mm. 

Well, a couple of days ago, I decided to do something about it.


As discussed last time, moving the wheels on the axles was likely to require heat, and that wasn't going to be good for the whitemetal axleboxes. With a bit of levering, the track pins holding these in place were pulled out, and then with a waggle, the axleboxes on one side came away. Fortunately, the glue had aged, and the joints broke. 


Popping the first axle in a vice, and giving the end a tap with a small hammer, the wheel moved. So did the second one, and soon they were set to the correct (41mm) back-to-back. A little superglue run around the wheel/axle joint, and they seemed pretty good. 

The second set were harder work. In the end, I had to heat up the joint with a small blowtorch to get anything to move, even with many, many whacks. Eventually, though, the joint gave up, and they were set as required. 

I refitted the axleboxes with pins, but no glue, and all seems good. The wagon has had a trip around our club track as part of the train, and seems to behave itself. Sadly, it won't fit in the goods train box, so I'm not sure how much use it will get. I do need a small wagons box for the skips. Perhaps it will find a home in there. 

Anyway, a fiver and half-an-hour well spent. 

four wheel wagon

Monday, December 08, 2025

Book Review: Between the lines. My Life at Hornby by Simon Kohler

Between the Lines

OK, this is an interesting one to review. Obviously, I know Simon, and have done for many years. When he left Hornby for the second time, I nagged him to write this book. I'm interested in the history of model railways, and no one has been at the centre of things for a longer period, than Simon. With that in mind, as soon as it came out, I paid my £34.99 for a copy. 

TLDR: It's a good read, and if you are like me, very interesting. 

The book traces Simon's working career from his earliest days at The Model Shop, in Northampton, through H&M and then the many, many years at Hornby. Over this period, the hobby changes quite dramatically. 

However, the single overriding question I think most people will take out of this is: How is Hornby still in business?  

Simon charts the various changes behind the scenes, both in management, and more importantly, in attitude to the hobby. We have the firm focusing its efforts away from their core activities of model railways and slot racing, to toys, and souvenir items, almost at random, and certainly with little understanding of the market at times.  

Now, this is one person's view, and it's only natural that if you write a book like this, you portray yourself as the hero, and to be fair, there are many times when Simon admits he made mistakes, or simply didn't speak up to try and stop others making them. That said, I've known him a long while, and also some of the other personalities involved, and it's, as far as I can tell, a pretty fair account. 

One of the most interesting areas is the move of manufacturing to China. We tend to think that this was purely based on keeping costs down, but it was heavily driven by a desire to produce models with high-levels of accuracy and detail. We couldn't do this in the UK, often as much due to attitude as ability. This ties in with Jason Shron, of Rapido Trains comments when considering moving manufacturing to Canada. Only the Chinese have the ability to produce the quality that modellers now demand. 

There are certainly plenty of interesting stories along the way. One of them saw me present Simon with a 3DS system to talk about at the NEC. This was classic Hornby management devising something that is a bit rubbish - and thinking it would be a major part of the company's output. At the time, they felt threatened by computer games, but the result didn't set the world alight. 

At 336 pages, this is a pretty big read, and it took me quite a while to go through. As I say, I found it interesting and enlightening. Some of the activities that caused Simon to leave for the first time are well-remembered by those of us trying to keep a lid on ranting modellers determined that Hornby was evil. Finding out exactly who was to blame wasn't a surprise...

If I have a complaint, it's that the later stages of Simon's career, mainly the second stint at the firm, feel a little rushed. I could have happily read another 30 pages to allow the story to breathe a little. Of course, there is the TT:120 book covering this, so that will have extracted a chunk of story. I wonder if it's too close at the moment, and while people mentioned in earlier parts of the text are long gone, those from the recent past are still around, so discretion plays a part. 

Whatever, as I'd hoped this does cover a lot of ground. If you want to know how the model railway business has evolved, that alone makes this worth a read. I could also see it being interesting to those interested in business generally. Hornby has never been afraid to try things, and some simply sink without trace. 

Which brings me to the biggest issue. Having read this, I know some of the items that didn't sell - and now I want to add them to my collection, along with the 3DS. A velodrome to start with, and then a Hornby livery HST. The last one was a surprise to me. Just proving that all the experience in the world doesn't mean you get all your guesses right! 

Sunday, December 07, 2025

Gwen's Cafe

 

Gwen's Cafe

Shockingly, I've managed a weekend without a show to attend, so instead, you will have to made do with a rather nice 4mm scale model I spotted while out on a layout shoot a couple of months ago. This wasn't in the layout I was photographing, and the layout it is on is a long way from being camera-ready, but I loved it, so grabbed a mobile phone shot. 

Saturday, December 06, 2025

Saturday Film Club: Design the SPV

How do you turn a classic vehicle from Captain Scarlet, into a slot car? Scalextric's designer explains.