Has anyone attempted to reproduce faithfully a branch line or an area of railway using Hornby sets and such like? How much space would we need to produce a faithful pared-down copy of the whole network using the Hornby scale?
I have two vague recollections:
1) an article in an Airfix Magazine annual from the late 1960s or very early 1970s of someone who built a model of one of the Cornish branches (Helston??) in its entirety.
2) someone who built a model of one of the main lines by having a series of shelves all the way around a room with iirc 4 or 5 levels so as to maximise the run length.
I think it was Peter Denny (builder and author of Buckingham Great Central) who said that a true scale model of an entire branch would be of little interest due to the very large spaces of just fields and plain track.
Well, a full size baseboard would need to be about 600x300 miles, so, in scale that would be about 8.5x4.25 miles
Well, a full size baseboard would need to be about 600x300 miles, so, in scale that would be about 8.5x4.25 miles
I'm pretty sure there is a section of desert or plain which is 8 miles by 4 miles and relatively flat. We just require an eccentric millionaire and many hands, tracks and models to get it done haha!
One mile is 21.17 metres at OO scale.Has anyone attempted to reproduce faithfully a branch line or an area of railway using Hornby sets and such like? How much space would we need to produce a faithful pared-down copy of the whole network using the Hornby scale?
How about Pete Waterman with Leamington Spa in a barn - in O gauge?
There is one man's project to build Birmingham New Street exactly to scale:
http://www.p4newstreet.com/