Sunday, April 26, 2026

SWAG 2026

 

Roll up! Roll up! Visit honest Phil's diorama stall! Get yourself a genuine artefact made by the great man. Guaranteed to rise in value in a few years...

Yes, when asked to take a stand full of projects, I decided (with permission) to take the opportunity to sell some of them off. My storage is getting full, and I'm going to need to put more in there while we shuffle rooms in the house, so a load of projects built years ago were finding themselves new homes. 

SWAG (South West Area Group of RMweb) is a loosely aligned group of people who like high-quality model railways, but don't take things too seriously. Each year, we take over a village hall in Taunton, bring layouts, and demos, add in a couple of traders, the Bring'n'Buy and lashings of cake and pasties. There is no entry charge, but visitors are encouraged to leave donations to keep the event going. 

It's a very freindly day. Lots of chat, plenty of time to admire the modelling, and a good time is had by all. Despite being there all day, I didn't photograph all the layouts, but here is a selection. 

Under construction, is this estate railway in O14, all the way from Wales.  


It wasn't alone, there was a forest of little layouts in the scale from the same builders. I'd love to have a go at some of this. 


The simplest layout there, had to be the 7mm scale Osney Quay. More a picture than a layout, there is just one length of track, it was beautifully modelled. 


Moving to S gauge, the show is nothing if not eclectic, Nancarrow Junction. 

Nancarrow Junction

Guinea Street is a classic Inglenook. The colours are lovely, and there's plenty of detail. Look out for a feature in BRM at some point. 

 

 

Owner Chris Hooper is very generous and will let all sorts of dodgy people play with his layout. I'm pretty sure this bloke doesn't know what he's doing. 

 

I know it's Great Western, but Bradstock is a nicely modelled engine shed scene. There's just the right amount of detail and clutter for a branchline scene.  

Bradstock

I saw Rye Sands a few weeks ago, and immediately wanted to shoot it for BRM. Luckily, SWAG is just the place to do this. Look out for a future feature. 

 Rye Sands

Finally, for the photos, but not the quality layouts, we have Crooked House, a layout built as a tribute to Andy York, using stock and materials he left when he passed away last year. 


 The modelling quality is astounding. Mr York himself makes an appearance of course. 


His layout, Keyhaven, was also present, but my photos of that aren't very good. 

Of course, it's not all about trains. There was cake. 


A very nice chocolate cake for elevenses, and then later in the day, because I missed out on the courgette cake, I opted for apple crumble and custard. 


Little Brian dislikes the yellow stuff as much as Big Brian did!

All in all, a cracking day out. I'd trade this sort of event for one of the bigger shows any day. Yes, it's a long drive, and me messing up my hotel booking didn't help, but this didn't detract from the fun day out. This is what the hobby is supposed to be about - community and quality model railways.  

Saturday, April 25, 2026

Saturday Film Club: 1975: MODEL RAILWAYS - All You Need to Know

Running model trains on a carpet for the benefit of a video camera? It will never catch on...

Friday, April 24, 2026

Off to the NGRS today

 

Today, it's my time to load up a van with plants, earth and stones - take the whole lot to Stoneleigh park, and make a garden railway with it. 

Yes, it's time for the National Garden Railway show.  

Please come along, say hello, and enjoy some large-scale railway action.  

Thursday, April 23, 2026

Standing behind the Berlingo, realising why I do this

 

Citreon Berlingo number plate light

At the last MOT, we picked up an advisory for one of the numberplate lights not working. The Berlingo has two, which is why we scraped through. But, it needed to be fixed, and last weekend was the time to do it. 

According to Haynes, you have to take the cover over the top of the plate to do this. I have replaced a bulb before now, and was sure I hadn't bothered with all this. Could I remember how? 

Half an hour of poking and prodding later, I'd extracted the holder, but it won't pull out without removing any significant parts. I started to remove the inside panel, but broke two clips, so stopped that. 

Then I looked back on this blog, and the answer is here. 

Put a small screwdriver into the hole in the side, lever the top towards the light bulb, and it pops straight out. At least it did for me, on both covers. Once I remembered that, the job took around 5 minutes, and I replaced both bulbs with nice LED versions. 

Thanks you past Phil. I should pay more attention to you.  

Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Warehouse Wednesday: A view from the USA

American building

A friend is on a trip to New York, and among the pictures of the view, and Statue of Liberty, there was this cracking shot. 

At first glance, there is nothing special about it, but that's what makes it so interesting, to me at least. Everything in this photo is American. The building with exposed fire escape on the front. The USPS van - I tried to identify the make, but can't work it out. 

My point is that you can't take an American building kit and plonk it on the UK layout. You'll need to do a fair bit of work first, but then that's all part of the fun isn't it?