WHEN establishing the theme and location of a layout,populating it with traction typical of the area painted in signature local liveries will quickly establish the layout’s credentials.
For example, modelling the Glasgow suburban area in BR days calls for distinctive EMUs painted in either SPT orange and black or the more up-to-date carmine and cream scheme, which will instantly help to place the layout.
To establish the feel of a layout based on that area, some kit building, conversions and a lot of repainting in any scale is inevitable to achieve the desired character and at least two or more trains alongside infrastructure, signage and road vehicles will need to be modelled. However, it will be all the more worth it in having a unique layout with a realistic theme and setting.
The same approach has been applied to the author’s ‘N’ gauge West Midlands-based layout where Centro would be the local passenger Transport authority or PTE in real life for the modelled time period. Centro livery was applied to multiple units working in the area including Class 323s and Class 150s too, and was not always available in out-the-box form. It shouts West Midlands and that is the reason for populating the layout with green Centro Class 150s to start with and working towards several similarly decorated Class 323s based on conversions around the Graham Farish Class 158. A lot of work is needed to populate even a small layout to that extent, especially with models of trains like the Class 150/0 and Class 323.
Bu hikaye Rail Express dergisinin May 2020 sayısından alınmıştır.
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Bu hikaye Rail Express dergisinin May 2020 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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