Scratchbuilding waggons or anything, is easier than one may think "If" one takes a different approach to ones modelling.
The normal approach is to replicate in miniature a realistic locomotive and whatever it pulls based on a real railway scene. In other words recreating an actual scene or at the very least, an actual miniature form of what would run on a scene even if it wasn't an actual scene.
But why give oneself such an impossible task? Even if one had the space and the funding, most model locomotives can't pull anything like scale length trains and their couplers rarely hold out if one tries. Even if one has DCC sound to add to the realism, rarely does the sound correspond to the movement of ones model. (Believe me, after ages of DCC programming in the days when I was using DCC, I never was able to get the sound quite matched up). But this exposes the problems with our modelling. The more realistic we try to make our models, the harder it becomes to get ones imagination flow as one notices the smaller inaccuracies.
At the other end of the scene I remember when I was a child of about five or six when I was ill so I was home from school, and my Dad was in work and my Mum had to go to the doctor or the chemist in the next village a few miles away (So was a long walk), and I was not well enough to go, so a lady we called an aunt, but was actually my Dad's cousins wife, spent a few hours looking after me, and during that time she tried to cheer me up and got a long Lego brick and said it was a train (She knew I liked trains). I looked at her daft as it was clear even to me as a child, that that wasn't a train, and as she cupped her hand to make what she claimed was a tunnel, I just looked at her daft! "Doesn't she know it is not a train?" was going through my head!
Looking back, what was wrong with the single Lego brick? Why couldn't it be a train? Because it did not capture the character of a train! Had she added wheels, and a few other parts to represent a cab, a dome and a chimney, it would resemble a train in my mind. But a single long Lego brick? Erm!
So we do need an element of realism, but what we do not need are impossible goalposts that we can set up for ourselves, which require unrealistically high expectations involving great financial costings and a lot of space.
Yes we can scale things down a bit and chose a smaller scale, but I found the smaller the scale the more work there is keeping track and wheels clean and the tiny mechanisms working.
So what is the answer to easy modelling that satisfies from more than one angle? Reduces cost. Reduces the need for a large space. Increases the fun.
I asked myself this in the past during a time when I had burnout where I had quit another job so I had no income. It was at a time when the two leading manufacturers decided to double their prices quoting that the price of scrap metal had doubled as an excuse. (One of the most stupid excuses I had ever heard). But I asked myself what was the answer? How could "I" continue?
The answer was staring me in my face, as it was right in front of me!!! As I sat on the bedroom floor of a house I once had, I was staring forward and in front of me was a Smallbrook Studio "Clio" kit in its bag which I had bought because I liked it. I loved the look of it, it was nice! I saw it in the advert and instantly fell in love! It wasn't even the right scale to the rest of my models at the time!
I saw this loco kit and I remembered I had a loco in my spares box with an ideal working chassis, so I already had all I need! Great!
Tears streamed down my face as I started to build it. This was personal!...
Fast forward and the loco was built though not quite 100% finished, but just about... so for me, it was ready. I went to look in my spares box for old wagon chassis I could use to make something in this scale for it to pull as the track gauge was the same as 00 and H0.... And the rest is history!
Now looking back, what is it that this 7mm narrow gauge loco kit had that none of my other 00 gauge models had? It wasn't even based on a real loco from what I can gather! But somehow it looked real and had a character of its own!
So what was it that appealed?
1. "I" had made it. It felt personal. There is something about it that one can't compare.
2. It was at the time reasonably priced. (Even after buying the kit and if one buys a donor loco at today's prices it is less than £100, and there is an even cheaper way, as one can buy a suitable loco secondhand and scale it up oneself without paying for a kit which is MUCH cheaper (Around £25 to £35 as I write. One may be lucky and get one even cheaper as I have seen these locos to convert (Little Hornby 4 wheel locos) selling for as low as £10 on occasions. (Usually £15 and up if in poor condition). They are easy to fix and work on and are pretty reliable)).
3. One can model in a small space in this scale, as I can fit a loco and five 4 wheel coaches in the same track space as three typical bogie coaches in 00 or H0. Yet it is in 7mm scale which is the same as 0. (0-16.5).
The loco and the stock I build I make to turn on a 2ft wide layout board. I have since bought someone else's collection which has the odd item which may not turn within this space, but in general nearly all I have can turn within this space.
4. Even if one has paid out more than one may have wanted for a loco, one is very much saving if one makes ones own rolling stock for ones loco to pull.
5. Consistency brings a far more realistic layout than one can imagine. If one makes (Or at least paints) everything oneself, one has a consistent scene. I bought a couple of little coach kits and two of these at the time were ready painted kits. I painted over them when I built them so I had a consistent approach. They look great! Had I not painted them, the immaculate factory paint finish would have exposed my standard of painting on my loco and other items. Even if ones own efforts are poor, consistency works, as it is like looking at paintings on a wall in a gallery. Some artists paint with amazing finescale detail! Others one has to step back to view the scene. Either way the paintings look great because they are consistent. One painting I saw on display looked awful. What was wrong with it? It took me ages to find out. The artist had spent ages painting every small detail on buildings and they really looked amazing! BUT the cars the artist painted in the streets near the buildings they did not even put in much effort. Had the artist painted the whole picture without much effort it would have been ok, or had they continued the amazing detail on the whole picture it would have been amazing! But these contrasts within the same painting spoiled the scene! It is why with ones models, if one has ones own scratchbuilt buildings, and one runs a highly detailed immaculate loco and stock past them, nothing looks right. BUT, if one has painted everything, or better still made everything, then everything looks right! (I am NOT saying one should paint over ones very expensive models. I am just explaining consistency and how it works).
6. Do NOT over-detail, but instead provide enough to make ones models or scenery look realistic.
7. Try and make as much as one can oneself. When I make waggons, I usually scratchbuild. When I do, I make my own buffers and couplings.
8. Narrow gauge in real life is usually remembered less than its more impressive larger standard gauge prototypes. Therefore, by modelling narrow gauge, one can get away with more inaccuracies without anyone noticing. Hardly anything I scratchbuild is anything like the prototype, and I only looked at prototypes to get a rough idea of how they work and what they roughly look like! Yet I have had far more success with this approach than the many years I spent trying to copy the real thing! It is a whole lot easier to capture the character rather than modelling an exact replica of a prototype, and when we walk away from a real scene, it is the character of what we see that we come away with!
Picture this. One stands by the track and watches an express train come thundering by. One is taken in by the speed and the experience! Now if one is modelling an express, and one scales it down to an ultra realistic scale speed, there is no way it will look right as it is not thundering past. Now run the model at top speed (If it does go fast) and watch realism come to life!
9. Smaller narrow gauge railways normally have smaller locos and run shorter trains. They too were used to reduce costs and fit in smaller spaces. (Small 2 ton waggons were preferred in the slate industry as they could be hand pushed into slate workshops by a single person, and it was a similar situation in other industries where smaller waggons were more useful down mines and in quarries etc).
10. Enjoy! If one is taking ones modelling too seriously, step back and have fun instead! Make something silly instead! A model of Toyland in the Noddy books, or a railway on Mars with imaginary little aliens riding trains! What ever it is that brings you joy and pulls you out of seriousness. After all, this hobby is meant to be FUN! And what one makes isn't real. Is ones own little world! So enjoy it!
