Model Railways and trains from Stockton Modeller

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Model railways and trains from Stockton Modeller

* Newsletter *

Stockton Modeller Ltd
Model railway and trains
www.stocktonmodeller.co.uk
1000's of products at excellent prices
found within our online shop
Click here to view our catalogue

 

Although it may be February, its looking more like Christmas outside. Hopefully by the time you get this newsletter it will have all started to clear up.

Christmas has once more passed us by, we hope it brought you everything you wished for, new model trains, sets and more!!!

You will have noticed the new edition to the Stockton Modeller online product range, not only do we now offer model trains and sets from Hornby, Bachmann, Graham Farrish and Heljan, we have added our complete range of Scalextric cars, tracks, accessories and sets.

What's in this edition of the Newsletter?

1. Model Train Competition Results

2. 2005 Catalogues in stock

3. Scalextric from Hornby

4. The Town of Sherlock from Nottingham: Model Railway Layout

5. Coming Soon

6. Future Offers

7. What the customers say.

8. A bit of humor


Firstly, the Christmas New Year Free model train competition was an excellent success.

Just to recap we offered entry into a free prize draw for anyone who purchased a model train set from us over Christmas & New Year. This ran alongside out free postage offer. We allowed 30 entries maximum which gave everyone a great chance of winning the top prize of a "Princess Royal 'Princess Elizabeth' 46201 Ltd Edition of 2004"

The official winner drawn very recently is: " M Speight from Lancashire".

The two runner up prizes of a CMA,UNIGLAORY,UASC Container Wagon and a LINEA MEXICANA Container Wagon were won by "Y. Taylor from Stockport" and "J Freeman from the Isle of Anglesey"

Once again we would like to thank all our customers who supported us through the Christmas period and who continue to do so now. We are intending to find more ways to pass on to you savings, offers and other opportunity to enter free draws and competitions.


2005 catalogues in stock

We now have all catalogues in stock for 2005 by Hornby, Graham Farrish and Bachmann.

Hornby R8109
Bachmann oo 36-2005
Graham Farrish 379-005

Click the links above to be taken to the catalogues in our online store.

Scalextric from Hornby
View our complete range of Scalextric Cars, bikes, track, buildings and figures on the web. Use the below link to go directly to the stock and if you are not a scalextric enthusiast, feel free to send this newsletter to your friends who are.

Scalextric Cars (Click Here)

Scalextric from hornby are a household name and cater for tastes young and old. With new releases always eagerly awaited and never ending interest in old models ensures that the Scalextric brand remains at the forefront of model cars.


Model Trains and more for Stockton Modeller.

From time to time we come across personal web sites of readers and other model trains and railway enthusiasts. We found this one a little time ago and would like to share this with you.

This is a personal model railway of Robin Sharman in Nottingham, he has some other pieces of information on his web site, but we thought we would introduce his layout to you.

http://homepages.tesco.net/~jksharman/robin1.htm, go to his web address for more pictures of this great set up, drop him an email and let him know you saw his set up on Stockton Modellers ezine.

The Town of Sherlock

In the four or five years up to 1998 I built the N-scale model railway shown in the accompanying photographs. It was the last in a series of U.S.-inspired layouts which I made whilst we lived in an English village pub between 1987 and 1999.

The baseboard was built in three 4 foot sections to fit into the room available with the intention also of fitting into a garage or a 12 foot shed when our lease on the pub expired and it was time to move. (In fact I decided to scrap the layout and start afresh, and now ensconced in our new house I am actively surveying the loft and drawing up plans for the approval of the domestic authorities!) The railway was controlled from the left hand side at the front using twin cab control and the panel shown below, which gives a good diagrammatic picture of the track layout.

The town of Sherlock lay to the left hand side of the layout and the tracks looped round behind the back scene so that (for example) the container train going into Moriarty Tunnel (below left) would reappear on the point work at the front edge. The back scene was Instant Horizons bought both in England and by mail order from America. The buildings were by D.P.M. and were readily available by mail-order in England. The girder bridges were by Peco as were the engine shed and the houses out in the country on the top road.

View across Sherlock yard with locomotive shed and running tracks behind

A close look into one of the windows of Mrs Hudson's lodging rooms revealed something of my sense of humour. Some girls have no shame! The overviews of the junction and the left hand end of Sherlock yard are self-explanatory. The turnouts at the end of the hidden storage tracks at the rear of the layout were actually under the brown building in front of the Sherlock Bank. This building and the road section here were removable to allow easy access in case of derailment or breakdown, although you could get to this section from the rear.

The track and turnouts were Peco. The turnout motors by Seep and Peco were operated by an electric pencil system on the track diagram (shown in the second photograph) through a capacitor discharge unit. The signals were scratch built from brass tubing, a washer and a bi-colour l.e.d.; and, although they were over scale, they worked very well and were very inexpensive. The operation of these signals was mostly automatic with manual over-ride facility. The automatic operation was done using a crude but effective method whereby two Peco accessory switches were mounted on top of a Peco motor and wired to form a D.P.D.T switch. As trains passed certain positions on the track, they actuated the appropriate motor which switched its signal to red or green (by changing the direction of the current to that signal) as required. The same method was used to start up and stop the flashing lights at the level crossing, which were supplied through a home-made bi-stable electronic circuit. This method necessitated ensuring that the "off" trigger was far away from the crossing to take account of the longest train.

The loco depot office block was originally a British modern image station building. The bar on the top road was obviously a popular stopping-off point! The Peco loco shed had its doors and central pillars removed to accommodate the dimensions of American locomotives which are much larger than the British ones for which it was designed.

The locos used were all models of diesel traction - mostly by Bachmann. They were originally used because they were very good value for money. Part way through the project Bachmann introduced their Spectrum series of locomotives and I bought two of these. They were a vast improvement of their predecessors, and their flywheel drive made them far better runners and so much smoother. If I return to N scale American modeling I shall have to use locomotives at least as good as these.

The first freight cars I bought were Bachmann - again because they were so reasonably priced. Later I bought some Atlas and Con-Cor models, and these were far better runners than their Bachmann counterparts. All of the stock was fitted with Arnold style couplings and I would dearly have liked to change over to Magne-matic knuckle couplers for their better appearance and automatic operation. once again the cost factor always seemed to rule this out. Perhaps it is better to have fewer items of better specification, but I was keen to reproduce long trains as quickly as possible.

At the right hand end of the layout the running tracks diverged. They disappeared into the single bore Milverton Tunnel and the twin bore Mycroft Tunnel. The scenario here was that Milverton was the original tunnel, and Mycroft was built to increase traffic-carrying capacity through the mountains.

Mycroft Tunnel

On the model trains entered the left hand bore of Mycroft Tunnel and swung round 180 degrees to reappear from Milverton Tunnel. Directly after emerging from this tunnel mouth the single track split into two to give the trains alternative routes when they got to the left hand end of the layout. The right hand bore of Mycroft Tunnel led round to the three hidden storage tracks which ran directly under the road along the back. The track between the level crossing and the hidden storage yard was operated as a bi-directional line, and normally one or two trains were made up for clockwise running.

This railway progressed as far as I wished to take it, although it would have benefited from further detailing. As stated above, it was built with the intention of taking it with us when we moved in 1999. However, I changed my mind and now "Sherlock" is no more and I shall start afresh at our new home. Building this layout taught me a lot about building a model railway, it was absorbing and along the way I learned a lot about American railroads and the Union Pacific in particular. Membership of the N.M.R.A. and the availability of the monthly magazines "Trains" and "Model Railroader" at the UK's best known newsagents were particularly helpful. Above all the project was good fun - something that many British modellers seem to me to have lost by taking their hobby too seriously!

Once more thanks to Robin for allowing us to publish this and don't forget pay his site a visit.


Coming Soon:

We shall be running future articles on the range of switches available, hoping to take away some of the confusion that they bring. Other articles include track cleaning pads, scenic's, seep point motors, tunnels, continental products and more. So plenty to come.


Future Offer:

As from next week anyone who purchases a Train Set from Stockton Modeller through the online shop can have a free wagon to the value of £7.00. You may if you wish select a wagon to a higher value and we will automatically add the difference to the order value. We will send a quick email early next week when we have the system set up fully.

Should we not have the offer process fully functional when you buy your train set from Monday, just drop us a quick email following your purchase with your preferred wagon and we will send that out to you.


What the customers say:

Hi, received train set today - thank you, when i replied to your message that you left
on my phone it was 6pm & the phone still got answered(amazing). Then the chap
phoned me back to say item had already been despatched, this was at 6.30pm an
hour after you close - great service. you all deserve wage rises, thanks again & merry christmas to all
.

Kevin Leadbetter
(a chuffed to bits customer)

Thanks Kevin, we sent this email to the boss several times highlighting the "you deserve wage rises" part of your message, not worked yet. Thanks for your comments we enjoy being appreciated by the customers it spurs us on to keep our service to a very high standard.

Dear Stockton Modeller,

"Just a quick note to say that I came across your name almost by chance when I
was looking for a fun present for my 73 year old young man. I was absolutely
delighted with the service I received ; the parcel is here on time despite the
seasonal rush. I am sure that the recipient will be equally delighted with the
contents of the parcel on Christmas Day - probably to the envying looks of his
grandchildren!! Thanks again for your help and I hope you all enjoy a well-earned
rest over the Christmas weekend."

Rosemary Doidge


Humor From Stockton Modeller

COW ON TRACKS....

A British Rail passenger train is creeping along, slowly. Finally it creaks to a halt. A passenger sees a conductor walking by outside. "What's going on?" she yells out the window.

"Cow on the track!" replies the conductor.

Ten minutes later, the train resumes its slow pace. Within five minutes, however, it stops again. The woman sees the same conductor walk again.

She leans out the window and yells, "What happened? Did we catch up with the cow again?"


Well that just about covers it from Stockton Modeller this week, hopefully you have enjoyed this Newsletter, please feel free to pass this around, send it to everyone you know :)

Don't forget, we always want to hear your comments good or bad, send your emails full of Jokes, stories, track layouts to feedback@stocktonmodeller.co.uk

If you have any queries with regards products or specifications, send an email to sales@stocktonmodeller.co.uk and they will take care of that for you. Alternatively visit the web site and send your query from the contact form.

Take it easy

The Stockton Modeller Team


Earlier Newsletter articles from Stockton Modeller.

Model Railway Figures / Model Railway Scenery / Model Railway Layout /
Model Railway Landscapes
/ Newsletter Feb 2005

Stockist's of Hornby, Bachmann, Graham Farrish and Heljan Model Trains,
Live Steam Engines, Coaches and Wagons. PLUS Hornby Scalextric (New Online)

Full Catalogues for Lyddle End and Scaledale track scenery
For an introduction visit
http://www.stocktonmodeller.co.uk/scaledale-model-railway-scenery.html


Also stock all accessories for model trains to compliment your set with full kits available.

http://www.stocktonmodeller.co.uk