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G J H Plant Company | Graham Harrison |
9 Old School Green | 01362 850843 |
Mattishall | |
Dereham | Email: Grahaminnorfolk@aol.com |
Norfolk | |
NR20 3FG |
Built and reviewed by Tommy Day
Wheels not included
I should say firstly that I know very little about the prototype for this wagon. Two of these kits were bought a few years ago, complete with wheels, for our club layout, and I remember at the time there were concerns about warping and twisting of the resin parts. The kits were eventually quietly put on the shelf, out of the way ‘for a rainy day.’
I pulled the boxes out a few weeks ago to have a look at what
was needed to build the wagons. The kits are mainly produced
in resin with a few white metal castings, and included brass
wire and nice couplings. They appeared to be quite easy to
build if the parts could be straightened. The basic body
comprises only seven resin parts, nicely moulded apart from
distortion. On reading the instructions, almost the first item
mentioned was how to correct the distortion, by ‘placing the
panels in hot water and then laying the part on a flat surface to
cool’, I suppose nobody at the club had actually read the
instructions! Anyway I tried it and it very much improved the
parts. So I decided to build the wagons.
These wagons must be amongst the longest of four wheel
wagons and I felt they would need some sort of suspension to
cope with track un-evenness, but apart from this the kits would
be built without further modifications. So I built them following
the instructions (which are basic, including photos and
sketches, but adequate) with the exception of fitting Bill
Bedford’s sprung inside bearings on one axle, to each van. I
obtained these from Eileen’s Emporium.
Using Loctite superglue, I assembled the van bodies as per
instructions after dressing off surplus resin flash. There were
some rather large gaps between parts on assembly, which
were filled using Plastikard and plastic filler. I found quite
quickly that the floor/underframe moulding distorted very
easily if any stresses were induced during assembly. Supplied
weights need to be added before sealing the body ‘box’.
On completion of the body, the fixed axleboxes were bushed
and fitted with the wheels, and then fitted to the floor
moulding, nesting nicely in the moulded floor/underframe
pockets. The second axlebox castings were then fitted. The
wheels were mounted on the sprung bearings, outside axle
extensions cut off, and after making some packings from
plasticard to set the height, they were secured to the floor.
Sprung buffers and the very nice coupling hooks were fitted
next, along with the few resin underframe details, handrails
and remaining details, all fitted in accordance with
instructions, sketches and photos.
I cannot comment on the accuracy of the finished model as
there is no dimensioned drawing in the instructions, and no
information on the original data used for the kit. Looking at
photos of the prototype, there is an amount of detail that could
be added, and the moulded body parts also look a little bit
heavy, but we now have a couple of quite robust, unusual
wagons.
When bought these wagons cost £45, each plus the cost of wheels and spring bearings, which I think was a fair price, and with patience nice models can been constructed. Plenty of photos of the prototypes are on the internet. I used some as guides to livery and weathering, they also helped during the build. Thank you GJH Plant Company.