UnfinishedKit Posted January 1 Share Posted January 1 I found my way here via @Kamome442’s Yurakucho project. I got back into modelling recently and have been building kits but needed a project. I’d been looking at 6.5mm Nj through finding things like Vivant but once you are down the Finescale path and especially when you think you might be scratch building point work anyway it turns out 0.6mm is important. So 7.1mm it is and the first job is to learn how to build track and modify rolling stock. it’s probably also worth mentioning that this is leading to a layout, but I don’t have space to do a big chunk of the Yamanote, nothing close. Although if it was I’d have to do ebisu, not the best from viewers perspective but it has might favourite boarding music (the harry lime theme from the third man) and one of my favourite sake shops (kimijimaya); it has a great tachibar as well. Ive been doing a bit of research and thought that would be worth sharing plus some of the how and why of what will be a very slow build. 2 Link to comment
UnfinishedKit Posted January 1 Author Share Posted January 1 Why? First off why am I even doing this? I was last doing modelling as a teenager and Swiss in N was my thing. I was really excited by Nm but never had the resources or the information to pursue it. Its was very much the pre or proto internet days and it was hard to find stuff. I can back to making stuff recently and because I spend a lot of time in Japan I wanted to do Japanese stuff, N was where I started but in N at 9mm, 1067mm gauge just doesn’t look right. Given that I like building things and solving problems more than I like running trains there had to be a solution. At on i cycled through everything. (Oj, wouldn’t that be nice if I had the room and the money, 1/80 13mm and 1/86 HO1067 12mm - still too big but getting closer, TT9 - almost perfect scale; so wouldn’t that be nice but there are almost no models, S1067 - there is one really nice paper kit from Iori koubou that I might build but…) So it has to be N, I found vivant and was all ready to do 6.5mm but i ran into problems with finding a paintwork solution that fit my space requirements. So if I’m going to scratchbuild or kitbash points I might as well do them in 7.1mm as 6.5mm. next up - everything I rejected or took inspiration from in 6.5mm 1 Link to comment
Andrew Nummelin Posted January 1 Share Posted January 1 1 hour ago, UnfinishedKit said: ...the first job is to learn how to build track… You may well find Templot (and its friendly Forum) very helpful if you want to get close to prototype practice. Templot is apparently off line for a few days https://85a.uk/templot/club/ 1 Link to comment
Kamome442 Posted January 1 Share Posted January 1 Good luck with this project, I am looking forward to seeing how your plans develop. Joe Link to comment
UnfinishedKit Posted January 3 Author Share Posted January 3 I made a thing so after saying I need to sit down and set standards and design tools, now I am back I found myself with a spare couple of hours and rather than take the 6 or so chair designs I’ve got on the whiteboard and turn them into etchings, I had a rummage. I took a Kiha Koubou pasteboard bogie and reguaged it and popped the rails out of a length of unitrack and stuck them down with double sided tape. The paper bogie is only really for static display in native form and I’ve really compromised what little structure it has. Nonetheless it was good to have a play rather than sit at the computer and draw. I've not quite cracked photography of this but it looks good under a paper rail car. I also had a poke around other rolling stock I have and I have a green max chassis that looks a cinch to convert. The gearboxes are narrow enough that I don’t think filing them down is necessary. It also got me thinking about the importance of bringing the bogie frames in with the wheels. You might be able to do it with the green max power bogies and I have a neat idea for an etched brass trailer bogie that could take the green max push in bogie frames (also the decokore ones as well) 2 Link to comment
UnfinishedKit Posted January 3 Author Share Posted January 3 On the plus side didn’t have to move the Kato wheels in, only file down the axles, but taught me the importance of having some jigs to make this easier. Link to comment
UnfinishedKit Posted January 7 Author Share Posted January 7 I don’t know if this means I have to create a new thread in layout building but I made a baseboard and bought some Peco code 60 rail for the next phase of experimentation. Code 40 will take ages to turn up and I’ll have to buy a bunch to make the shipping worthwhile so I’m holding off for now. I’m restricting myself to things I have in the garage and small purchases from local stores where possible. as I work things out. There was a bit of plywood left over from when I made my filter stand for the sake homebrew setup. Not the world’s flattest but the battens pulled it back. I’ve got a hokey idea for how to do track without 3D printed or PCB sleepers, I’ll reveal what it is when I’ve seen how it works. 2 Link to comment
Tony Galiani Posted January 7 Share Posted January 7 You might find this channel interesting. He did a layout of the Gakunan Railway in 7.1 mm gauge and there are a couple of very short videos there. He also posted pictures in a thread on RMWeb. I don't have that link but it might be worth searching that out. Cheers, Tony 1 1 Link to comment
UnfinishedKit Posted January 7 Author Share Posted January 7 @Tony Galianithanks for that. I hadn’t gone hunting on rm web so this is great sadly all the images lost in the great crash but the videos look good and I’ll have a proper watch later. Link to comment
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now