Skegness here we come!

So it is that time of year again when modellers are frantically putting the finishing touches Img_4601

A VW Campervan

A VW Campervan

to their models and displays in the hope that they will perform as expected after the long haul up (across or down) to Skegness. Here it has been a little different….

I fully intended to look in on one day, but had no plans to exhibit – and then Meccano’s advertising agency got in touch to ask if I could help them with models to fill a 21ft window display they had obtained in Skegness’s shopping centre! These had to be there from 28th June through to July 6th when the show closes. Cue some rapid stock-taking … yes, there were enough models around, though all needed some attention and repair after a lot of shows and journeys. And then there was the Eagle space ship …. not finished, but it just had to go! But I was going to be away on holiday from 14th – 28th June, so there was even less time available! That meant a lot of late nights to finish the cab, the engine bay and the central passenger module. It was worth it, though, to see the reaction when the agency director kindly came over to pick the models up and saw it for the first time!

So a varied collection of my trucks, rockets and space ships are currently sitting in a window in the Hildred’s centre in Skegness, hopefully inspiring the punters to look in on the Skegex Meccano Show in the Embassy Theatre from 4th – 6th July. (Strangely the one that usually provokes most reaction is my VW Camper! Perhaps because we all either had one or knew someone who did) Vast numbers of models from across the UK and far beyond promise to be there, including the famous James May Meccano TT Bike!

Perhaps we will meet up there as well – till then …..

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From one end to the other

Having worked on the cabin of our spaceship it was obviously time to head to the other end and do something about the engine bay. Four large engine nozzles (fusion reactor driven, apparently!) plus the ancillary tanks, four spherical and four elongated with spherical ends. Quite a challenge in this medium! Each sphere worked out to about an hour’s construction. Img_4601

Then mount them all together and work out how to fit them onto the main framework, preferably in a way that allows for quick removal for transport – this is getting seriously heavy.

Stokys Dumper Truck

And good news – this and the trucks, plus the Mercury Atlas complex, have all been booked to go on display in a Skegness shop window for a week in Juluy to advertise the international Meccano show! So all I have to do is finish them in the next two weeks before I go on holiday …..

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Cabin pressure

Some models are easy enough – lots of square sides and shapes. and then there are the other sort, with few flat surfaces and all sorts of odd profiles. The sort where you wonder why you took on this challenge! One of these is the control cabin of the Eagle Spaceship from Space 1999.

Well, I had built the main pods and framework and I’m well on with the engine bay so I could put this off no longer. I decided the best bet was to amass the best drawings I could find on the net and then blow up the plan and elevation views to Meccano size so I could offer up some constructions to these. That seemed to work well, and then once we had found the right curves to match the plans, it was down to filling in the surfaces. The tricky task was inevitably getting inside the tight spaces to do nuts and bolts up as it progressed! But bit by bit it came together and the cabin is now bolted onto the main frame. There are even a couple of pilots on board for those who care to peer in through the windows! Perhaps we need to add some lights there …

Cabin, Eagle Space 1999

Cabin, Eagle Space 1999

Now it is off to build some more engine nozzles and fuel tanks, and then the central DROP module. Today there is a whisper that I might be needed to help with another shop window display this summer, so no pressure then! It’s just as well the evenings are long …

More anon….

 

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More photos

It’s been rather quiet on this blog for a while – my apologies! Rather busy with Easter services, problems with a retina (now sorted, thankfully) and working on a major new model – of the Space 1999 Eagle Transporter. The surgeon did say no heavy liifting for a month – rather a challenge when you have a model like this! More photos of that soon ….

But as a reminder of previous work I have uploaded some of Greg’s great photos onto the New Zealand site – check out

http://www.nzmeccano.com/image-75857 for my model of the Apollo Saturn V rocket on its launch pad. This featured in Constructor Quarterly at one point, and was one of the central displays at a Meccano exhibition in the Leicester National Space Centre. Greg’s moody images capture something of a night launch, as some of them were.

http://www.nzmeccano.com/image-75858 contains pictures (again by my son) of a more recent model, of the Mercury Atlas launch complex. This was based on the old Revell plastic kit, together with the usual wealth of photos available on the internet.  This was the earlier rocket that launched a series of one-man capsules into space in the early sixties. did you know that the names of the “Magnificent Seven” Mercury astronauts were then given to the heroes of the TV Thunderbirds series?

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Productivity

The darker months are often a good time for moving projects on, and so it has proved here. The Eagle Space Ship has made good progress, with all four landing pods and one more systems bay complete. Watch out for pictures here soon! There are so many parts required for this project there has been a lot of refurbishing and respraying going on to bring grim parts up to display standard. And I have even had to buy some more Obtuse Angle Brackets!

But it has also been a good time for paper work, producing six pages on demand for the desperate editor of the Meccano Newsmag recently and developing three small modelplans – two for a domestic project Greg and I are working on here and one for the MW series. MP208

This is a 12pp description of the Logging Trailer we have mentioned here before – just the trailer, though – a description of the truck will take a lot longer!

Paperwork is probably the best option at the moment since I have just had another problem with a retina (the right eye this time) and after some laser-spot-welding, as the surgeon put it, that means no heavy lifting for a while which rules out some of my models!

But once I can see properly again, hopefully work will resume.

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High sided

With gales last night reaching 112mph on the western edges of our island it was no surprise to see news this morning of all sorts of damage. With the wind whipping the branches of the many trees in my garden it sounded pretty rough – a good night to stay inside! My sympathy goes out to all who couldn’t and can’t – who have to be out on the roads facing all sorts of dangers. I saw a clip of one curtainsider which had blown over on the M6, just being righted by a breakdown crew. It looked very battered. Here’s a tribute to the heroes who keep our homes and stores supplied with all we need each day.

Peterbilt with 40ft refrigerated trailer

Peterbilt with 40ft refrigerated trailer

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with wings like Eagles

There was something wonderfully sonorous about NASA’s historic announcement in 1967 – “The Eagle has landed!” telling the world that Man had landed on the moon for the first time. I can’t help but feel that the Chinese missed a trick here when they got their unmanned craft to land on the moon recently. I am sure they are very proud of it, but somehow “The rabbit has landed!” really doesn’t have the same effect, does it!

Spacecraft need good names to suit their heroic adventures, and “Eagle” is as good as any. Of course, hard-core SF fans will know that this was also the name of the space-going work-horses that supplied the needs of Moon-base Alpha in the classic TV series Space 1999. There is talk of this series being rebooted as Space 2099 (original!) see http://catacombs.space1999.net/main/epguide/tx2099.html – if so the hardware is surely bound to play a significant part as it did once before. Bring it on!

But for now I’m working on a model of the original vessel from the British/Italian science-fiction television series that ran for two seasons and originally aired from 1975 to 1977. A nice Meccano version of this featured on the cover of the January 1978 Meccano Magazine, and I have fancied having a go at my own version ever since. A larger scale version by French modeller Laurent Chaté (laurent.chate@wanadoo.fr) was featured in the International Meccanoman nos 63 & 64 and can also be seen here: http://www.la-roue-tourne.fr/index.php/le-meccano/mes-modeles/170-eagle-space-1999. E2 Img_4407-2

Inspired by this I have begun work on my own version, built to the same scale as Laurent’s but using my own library of drawings gleaned from the Internet. Among other statistics it uses some 32 Hinged Flat Plates – when did you last use more than two in a model? – and a vast number of Obtuse Angle Brackets (for obvious reasons). It’s not going to be a quick build, and with the amount of detail included it is not going to be light, either, but all is progressing well so far. Both CAM (the French Meccano Club) and TIMS (Ironbridge, UK) are taking “Space” as their exhibition theme this year, so even if I am not exhibiting there myself, maybe this is a timely model. So, (no pun intended), watch this space!

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Obsolescence

When I was a young boy I was always looking for another model to build, having exhausted all the models in my Meccano instruction manual. The obvious place to look in those pre-Club and pre-MW Models days was of course the Meccano Magazine. I waited eagerly for this to arrive each month, and the first pages I turned to were always those with pictures and instructions of models and mechanisms. I tried my hand at many of these if my parts stock allowed, but I was sometimes frustrated to read that for this or that construction one had to use an “obsolete part”; this would often have been something like a 20-tooth Pinion or an Octagonal Coupling. In those far-off days, of course, one had a chance of buying spare parts (pocket-money allowing) from the entire current range at the local bike shop or toy store, but these obsolete parts were still tantalisingly out of reach, the province of old men who had been with Meccano for decades.

Meccano Magazine February 1937

Meccano Magazine February 1937 (Photo credit: mrrobertwade (wadey))

Now I find myself rapidly approaching that very same status! And I begin to worry that I may be causing younger modellers the same frustration that I once felt. The Meccano Magazine is long gone, but in Model Plans (and I have been involved in producing more than a few) we sometimes glibly talk about “obsolete parts” as if we all still had access to the same fixed catalogue that we did fifty years ago. In a sense many of us do, thanks to the healthy market in second hand, after-market and reproduction goods that flourishes around most clubs and on-line. But if we were to think about the parts that the average youngster will now have access to outside of the club scene, in other words the ones that occur in current sets, then how many more should be classed as obsolete? Even items as basic to an older generation as #52 the 11×5 Flanged Plate, the Brass Collar (#59) or Coupling (#63), the once-ubiquitous Flanged Sector Plate (#54) or Strips and Girders of any useful length are now long gone.

A model steam locomotive built with Meccano at...

A model steam locomotive built with Meccano at a Meccano exhibition in Madrid. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

So, what are we asked at shows? “Can you still get it, mister?” “Of course,” we say, “just look online or go to any number of large chain stores”, and no doubt some do. But what will the new purchaser find? Nothing on the scale of models we old hands produce and for all the ingenuity of some modern kits, no chance of emulating our constructions, either, because the necessary parts aren’t there. We often bemoan the lack of youngsters in the hobby, but as long as we produce little more than supermodels using unattainable parts, how accessible will our hobby seem to the young newcomer?

Meccano always used to be aspirational – we always wanted to get the next set up. Well, there seems little chance of going back to the old days of Conversion Sets. But that doesn’t mean we can’t still inspire a new generation ourselves. Just before Christmas 2008 the Spanner Community set itself a challenge to build a range of models from the old 00+ set – an incredibly limited range of parts – but the results, and the range of subjects, was astonishing, so good in fact that a manual was produced detailing them all. Other Christmas challenges have come and gone since then, but none met that first success. But why not build on that idea for your next Club challenge? Why not select one of the currently available kits and with no other parts than those within it set out to produce something really original? A display of those at your next public exhibition might then genuinely persuade a new generation that this is still an accessible hobby which they can

Meccano model motorcycle built with the Meccan...

Meccano model motorcycle built with the Meccano Motion System 50 set. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

really engage with.

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Times of change

Greg's pic of my TIE spce ship

Greg’s pic of my TIE space ship

It is always sad to lose an old friend, and when it is your fault ….

My large TIE fighter (Star Wars space ship) has stood in a corner of our living room for several years now and has given me immense pleasure. There were all sorts of little details on it which I loved, and I loved the overall impact of the model in its mixture of zinc strips and girders and blue-gold plates. All credit to the Star Wars special effects modellers who dreamed up the original!

But nothing is for ever, and I knew it would have to come down one day. When it toppled off its pedestal while I was vacuuming the carpet nearby, thereby bending a 24.5″ Angle Girder in the process, I decided the time had come! So with a heavy heart a day later the screwdrivers, spanners and part boxes were assembled, and gradually it vanished.

I still feel slightly guilty! Mind you, it is part of a programme of renewal following the last exhibition of the season. So far I have stripped down one motorbike, a small space ship, a taxi, a launch ramp and several other bits and pieces. But as is the way with all of these things, the next idea is swirling around. Taking up the Star Wars theme again, how about a model of the Y-wing fighter? It would turn out at about 4ft long, from the look of it, giving lots of room for superdetailing the surfaces. As the dark nights of winter gather round the UK, this is the ideal time to be making such plans – so watch this space!

Y-wing 3

Star Wars Y-wing ship by http://www.smallartworks.ca

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Meccano and Model Railways

Meccano and Model Railways have long gone together, so when it comes to an exhibition they make for a great pairing. Thus when friends at my church (the Baptist Church in Hill Street, Swadlincote) asked whether I’d like to be part of an exhibition in our church hall I didn’t take much persuading! So my son and I gathering every Meccano model in the house – and there are rather a lot! – and packed them all of to our show in late October.

There they joined various railways models, layouts and memorabilia brought by friends and members of the church. We saw station signs and notices, lengths of railway track, lamps, literature, model layouts, military dioramas, scale rolling stock and much more. Children tried their hand on a Meccano trebuchet and a radio-controlled car and were delighted by such a range of models on show.

Overall verdict – great fun for all the exhibitors who are already talking about another event next year; a treat for the visitors (many of whom talked of joining in themselves with items next time), and the usual combination of nostalgia and entertainment that  goes with such events. Well done to everyone who made it such a fun time!

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