Australian screenshots

Hey all, seeing some great shots recently :)

Jake, you got to stop making me drool from that Deloraine based layout. Looks really similar, considering I used to live in Tasmania :P
 
Thanks guys for the help.

I know Cardiff Workshops made a model of the first bridge, is there a way I can get in touch with either Natvander or Davido to see what has happened to it?

-Cheers
 
On Saturday the 20th December i will be making available the first section of the Sydney To Gosford Route, the first section will be Gosford to Hawkesbury River, all assets that i have built for this route will also be and extra folder with the download for that section just wanted to give you all a heads up,



 
Yes Please
On Saturday the 20th December i will be making available the first section of the Sydney To Gosford Route, the first section will be Gosford to Hawkesbury River, all assets that i have built for this route will also be and extra folder with the download for that section just wanted to give you all a heads up,
 
Jake, you got to stop making me drool from that Deloraine based layout. Looks really similar, considering I used to live in Tasmania :P

G'day!

Haha. You got it. It is based off Deloraine. I used to live in Devonport, about a 45 minutes drive North-East of Deloraine so I thought "what better place to base a route off." Its part of a bigger route I have made, inspired by the Tasmanian landscape

Cheers!

Jake.
 
@Steve123. Is it just me? When I click on one of your thumbnails all I get is an Imageshack page with severasl URL's and HTML items to copy and paste. No pictures.

Bill
 
Hi Patchy
From what I can tell, they could haul a decent sized passenger train for their size. The M's were designed for suburban services, and some of those trains were amazingly long! That said, we're talking about relatively small carriages, and they were somewhat lighter than later designs :) The ABL's are 'standing in' for the earlier 'dogbox' cars (later lengthened, and modified, into the familiar electric 'doggies'), and are about 1 compartment longer thanks to the toilets. The other cars are typical, or semi typical though :)

The M's were rated a little less than the E's, and I've got photos of them hauling up to about 7-9 'dogbox' cars of varying lengths from memory, whilst the M's I believe ran about 5-6 cars. Their main issue was lack of range, rather than tractive effort, due to the tiny bunker :) That said, off the flats, she did struggle! The climb out of Lilydale particularly, you need to be on the ball with your fire there :)

Regards
Zec
 
This started out as a build I was going to finish for someone, but the original was more like a TGR M class. So it is a new build except for the catcher on the front, Cylinders and handrails on the back of the cab, which I kept from the old model. Some minor bits and pieces and texturing left to do.

We now have a TGR H class, a strange set up as the trailing bogie frame is fixed to the loco frame and does not move, but the wheels move sideways, which apparently is allowable in trs (thats up to Dave to figure out :D) This will be a skinny rails only model. Now for the tender.

H-scr1.jpg


cheers

Pete
 
QLD Department of Natural Resources and Mines have recently made available free downloadable historical maps https://www.dnrm.qld.gov.au/mapping-data/maps/research-history/maps-plans. I have posted more information on Railpage http://www.railpage.com.au/f-p1956165.htm#1956165 to save space on this trainz thread.


Some samples from the URLs in row G on the spread sheet downloadable from 1:10000 series 1974–1992—Queensland cadastral (property boundary) map page which shows the cadastral property boundaries for long closed lines including the Southport and Boonah lines https://data.qld.gov.au/dataset/his...resource/cc5d1a4b-9c90-4eaf-86c5-839e000d128b


Peak Crossing 3.7MB file size from 1976 cadastral map with the Boonah line marked https://geospatial.information.qld..../cad-map-10000-9442-24-peak-crossing-1976.jpg


Boonah 3.7MB file size from 1975 with the line including the route north over the “red bridge” viaduct route https://geospatial.information.qld....adscans/cad-map-10000-9442-20-boonah-1975.jpg


Fernvale on the Brisbane Valley Line from 1978 5.3 MB file size https://geospatial.information.qld....cans/cad-map-10000-9443-323-fernvale-1978.jpg

I don't always read Trainz so may not see replies here so maybe try Railpage.


Ron [Mister Chugg], I seem to have lost your email, sorry, so can you send it privately via my usual email.
 
That TGR H class looks nice. Were they passenger engines?

The H class were 4-8-2 'Mountain type' locos, capable of pulling anything up hills. They probably did work some passenger trains, but mainly freight. Wonder if we'll see H2 as it was in the 80's :p

H2a1.jpg


Looking good as always Pete.

Cheers
Tim
 
, a strange set up as the trailing bogie frame is fixed to the loco frame and does not move, but the wheels move sideways, which apparently is allowable in trse

Look here: http://online.ts2009.com/mediaWiki/index.php/"Bogeys"_container
looking particularly at the "rotation-permitted" and "sideplay-permitted" tags, these allow you to have a bogie that will move side-to-side, but not swivel, and vice versa.
Very useful things, if you ask me.
 
Back
Top