Somewhere in Yorkshire

Dedicated area to show the community your model railway projects.
Phil s
Posts: 68
Joined: Wed Jun 03, 2020 7:17 pm
Location: Yorkshire
Contact:

Re: Somewhere in Yorkshire

#11

Post by Phil s »

Many thanks for your comments guys.
I agree it does need some back scenes and the yard needs a good coat of dirt :D and will probably start on these areas next to improve it and give it more depth.
User avatar
teedoubleudee
Posts: 1116
Joined: Fri Oct 05, 2018 2:53 pm
Location: Downham Market
Contact:

Re: Somewhere in Yorkshire

#12

Post by teedoubleudee »

Looks really good Phil, well done.
Most people are shocked when they find out how bad I am as an electrician
User avatar
Mr Bones
Posts: 692
Joined: Sun Oct 14, 2018 9:24 pm
Location: Canterbury Area
Contact:

Re: Somewhere in Yorkshire

#13

Post by Mr Bones »

Looking good Phil. Thanks for sharing.
And the Lord said unto John “Come forth and receive eternal life”, but John came fifth and won a toaster!
glencairn
Posts: 1554
Joined: Sun Jan 06, 2019 10:30 am
Location: Both sides of the Border
Contact:

Re: Somewhere in Yorkshire

#14

Post by glencairn »

Welcome on board, Phil. A lovely looking layout you have there. Nice to have another Yorkshire based layout here. :)
Glencairn
To the world you are someone. To someone you are the world
I Cannot Afford the Luxury of a Negative Thought.
IanAlan
Posts: 463
Joined: Sat Oct 20, 2018 9:55 pm
Location: Essex
Contact:

Re: Somewhere in Yorkshire

#15

Post by IanAlan »

You've got a lovely layout. I look forward to seeing more photos, especially of the viaduct - perhaps with a backscene sometime in the future, and the hopper wagons - you've got room for a dozen without them catching up with their tail. Terrific.
Phil s
Posts: 68
Joined: Wed Jun 03, 2020 7:17 pm
Location: Yorkshire
Contact:

Re: Somewhere in Yorkshire

#16

Post by Phil s »

Afternoon guys, many thanks for your comments. I've done a lot of thinking since first posting on here about your comments and agree with them that it's too "clean" needs dirt and weathering. This could be beyond my abilities but I feel like giving it a go, so watch this space.
Not done much these last few weeks, keep getting distracted with shunting or just running trains.
One thing I have done is a small experiment with a new ( to me) decoder, it's made by LaisDcc, which you can add a " stay alive" to it. The plan being is if their any good I would fit them in my 08 shunters, occasionally they do stall on the points in yard so thought a stay alive may be a fix.
Thought I'd fit it first to my ageing class37 (it only has pick ups on 4 of the 6 wheels and it's due a wheel clean). This would test the stay alive. The chip it's self is small
Image

Image

Image
The othe r chip is a standard bachmann.
Fitting was straight forward, just plugged in and soldered the two stay alive wires to the wires from the chip.
Image
Then gave it ago. Did it work.....
It did, but the speed kept changing (speeding up then down again). The stay alive worked ok, lift the loco off the track and it keeps running for about 6 seconds with lights on. Ran it up and down the yard over the troublesome point and never stalled. So not sure why speed changes will have to do a bit of digging on that before I get any more. But the stay alive seemed to work ok.
Any ideas greatly appreciated 😋
Hound Dog
Posts: 469
Joined: Thu Oct 04, 2018 7:46 pm
Location: Ayrshire
Contact:

Re: Somewhere in Yorkshire

#17

Post by Hound Dog »

Hi Phil,

I am sure the guys who have more experience than me will advise, but one the first things I have learned to check when a dcc loco misbehaves is whether DC running has been disabled....... this may or may not help you problem, but I think it is good practice to do on DCC.

This can be adjusted via the value of CV29 in programming mode on your dcc controller..... I was sent the attached link from another member of the forum a while back and it has helped fixed several problems for me, including changing what I want to be the No1 end when running forward

http://www.2mm.org.uk/articles/cv29%20calculator.htm

Hope this helps - cheers Richard
Phil s
Posts: 68
Joined: Wed Jun 03, 2020 7:17 pm
Location: Yorkshire
Contact:

Re: Somewhere in Yorkshire

#18

Post by Phil s »

Thanks for that Richard, I'll give that a go later. To be honest these are a cheap decoder (£12) so could just simply be a case of you get what you pay for. It was worth a try though. :D
Bandit Mick
Posts: 908
Joined: Thu Oct 04, 2018 7:42 pm
Contact:

Re: Somewhere in Yorkshire

#19

Post by Bandit Mick »

Out of a personal interest regarding points, what type are you using?
Phil s
Posts: 68
Joined: Wed Jun 03, 2020 7:17 pm
Location: Yorkshire
Contact:

Re: Somewhere in Yorkshire

#20

Post by Phil s »

Hi Mick, my points in the yard are standard set track peco points. The rest of layout are peco streamline track and points. The lack of space dictated using set track in yard unfortuantly, its only these that give the odd problem.
All insurfrog and code 100
Post Reply

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 5 guests