I think we’re slowly beating this thing into submission.
I’ve connected up a few LEDs on the panel that correspond with a couple of insulfrog points as I can use the inbuilt switch in the Seep point motor. I also have a dozen Gaugemaster autofrogs on order so I can fit them and repurpose the PM switches for the LEDs. The wiring for these is all in place and just needs to be connected up.
2021-05-24_03-35-55 by
Steve Mumford, on Flickr
Andof course, as one stage of the build nears completion I’m thinking about the next - there’s some work to be done testing the layout once all the lights and switches are in place, and I do have a couple of small scenic foundation bits in mind around the viaduct and coaldrops.
But the next ‘big’ thing will be point rodding. Previously I have used the Wills kit but that works out to be very expensive in the long run. Consequently I have ordered a significant number of rodding chairs (whitemetal) and cranks and pulleys (etched brass).
This is where the challenge now arrives - trying to find straight, square section brass or steel for the rodding itself. It is available in small quantities (no idea how much I will need yet) or on a roll which may not straighten enough.
The alternative is to use round section straight wire which is available in longer lengths.
Looking back at prototypical practice, pretty much everything I have ever seen is square although I believe round rods were used in the very early part of the the last century.
But will it look right?