September 22, 201410 yr Perhaps it's because I used to have an actual model railway, but other than fudging things to power them, I always want to make it look as close to the real thing rather than adding play value.
December 1, 201410 yr Author I have finally finished it and took it to a great show today with my LUG. The video is at the end. We did a display at the Mid America Train and Toy show. Edited December 2, 201410 yr by garethjellis
December 2, 201410 yr On 9/22/2014 at 10:37 PM, Lind Whisperer said: Didn't notice that about the sliding doors. Some people just like making their models functional, even if the functions probably won't be used. For info, the Intercity 125 coaching stock is not sliding door, they are slam door stock with central locking. Fantastic model by the way, you've captured the look perfectly! It would look awesome with a few more carriages!
December 2, 201410 yr On 12/2/2014 at 12:47 PM, English Electric said: For info, the Intercity 125 coaching stock is not sliding door, they are slam door stock with central locking. Fantastic model by the way, you've captured the look perfectly! It would look awesome with a few more carriages! I think he may have been referring to the internal doors, which are sliding on the full size. It has to be said, it never ceases to amaze me just how much realism can be achieved with lego bricks. Well done!
December 2, 201410 yr Author I sadly didn't take enough pictures got absorbed in a few coupling problems, but here is one sat net to the Class 455. Thank you all for the kind words. https://flic.kr/p/pj7hUb Edited December 2, 201410 yr by garethjellis
December 3, 201410 yr On 12/2/2014 at 1:05 PM, Heppeng said: I think he may have been referring to the internal doors, which are sliding on the full size. It has to be said, it never ceases to amaze me just how much realism can be achieved with lego bricks. Well done! Indeed, the external doors are slam doors, but the internal are automatic sliding doors.
December 3, 201410 yr In the video, the curved track the train was running on did not look like standard lego curves. Was it? If not, what was the radius? The train is gorgeous, very impressive, kudos.
December 3, 201410 yr Author Thank you pirzyk. I need to iron out some running issues but was eventually pleased with its performance. The curves are home build 72 stud Radius. I made a jig and used Plastruct ABS I beam MEK'd to the top of 2x8 plates, they worked very well.
December 4, 201410 yr On 12/3/2014 at 3:02 PM, garethjellis said: Thank you pirzyk. I need to iron out some running issues but was eventually pleased with its performance. The curves are home build 72 stud Radius. I made a jig and used Plastruct ABS I beam MEK'd to the top of 2x8 plates, they worked very well. Excellent! When you have time it would be great to see more about your jig and the curves too.
December 4, 201410 yr Nice to see a whole train, especially at a beefy scale like this. Everything looks a little bit big compared to the wheels, though... how long/high is each car?
December 4, 201410 yr Author Hi Commander Wolf, Scaling is the most challenging with Lego due to its rigid stud system, However, this makes for a more fun and challenging hobby. Each coach is 64+ studs long, Engines are 51 studs long. All the train is 10 studs high from rail height. and * studs wide. Have a look at the scaling picture attached, My version mostly fits the scaling. As far as I can tell the wheels on the real one would scale to just under 2.3, inner rim to inner rim. (see below) so the lego train wheels dimensions are 3 to the flange and 2.30 to the inner rim. So in actual fact the outer dimensions of the Lego wheel flange are too big for this model. When I ran this train with the 6 wide's it does look big for sure. Its total length was over 9 ft.
December 17, 20168 yr Love the inter city 125 had it as a hornby train set a long time ago lol. Any plans to do more on this will
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