building

Feb 2014 15

A quick workbench update

With the lack of communication you may think nothing is happening in Utrainia, but that isn't quite the case. As usual I have a few pots on the boil.

First of all, a new arrival! A little wee tram recently turned up in a box from Japan, and delightful it sure is. As usual for Utainia, the international theme continues, and this tram is no exception. It is a German tram, gifted to Hiroshima after the war. Now it is running in the vaguely New Zealand setting of Raparapa, passing British and American cars, while French trains scream past on the other track.

I have also been playing with a halogen bulb for photography, which emulates the strong shadows of daylight very nicely.

Meanwhile, a huge truckload of our stuff from Christchurch arrived; amongst it is the best new ...

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Feb 2014 6

Ranuska progress

Today marks one month and one day of marriage, and so to celebrate a national holiday was declared for all citizens. Much was achieved today on several of the projects I currently have on the go.

Druzhba Sanatorium

Exciting progress has been made here. I have been busy casting and cleaning up the window assemblies, as for some reason each casting tends to include a few rather visible air bubbles, requiring quite a bit of cleaning up and filling. I've been working away on that when I have time, and today I had enough to move onto the next stage: assembling it.

I started by designing a cutting template for the floor, to ensure everything was correctly angled and formed a smooth circle. Autodesk Inventor made short work of that. Once I'd cut out the pattern in styrene I set about arranging the window assemblies. Luckily it all went to plan and soon I was looking at this:

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Feb 2014 1

The buildings of Ranuska

Perhaps one of the most interesting features of Ranuska will be the bizarre architecture, all of it based on real life examples of Communist-era architecture.

Psirtskha tunnel portals

One of the most striking thing to me about the Psirtskha railway station is the bizarre tunnel portals that it features. I have no idea why they are so large and ornate, but they are very striking:

(Source: http://www.panoramio.com/photo/16701862)

So I decided Ranuska should have one.

I designed the master in a CAD program, then converted it into G Code for my CNC machine and left it to do its business.

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Feb 2014 1

Ranuska progress

Progress continues slowly on Ranuska, but between a honeymoon and starting back at work surprisingly little has been achieved.

However progress is being made. With Rachel's help I've started building up the land forms. First off some scraps of foam were stuffed in the gap between sea level and land level to form a ring of rocks.

Other lumps of polystyrene were used to build up the land forms:

Around the beach are I added some foam core where the beach is to be. I then mixed up some very ancient Woodland Scenics Scultamold, which is a sort of lum...

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Jan 2014 16

Birth of a new module: Ranuska

There is much to celebrate here in Utrainia at the moment, be it the crowning of the Queen of Utrainia, the start of a new year, or first anniversary of the founding of Utrainia. And to celebrate, the citizens felt it was time that they had somewhere warm and sunny to go and bask, somewhere with a beach, and nice hotels, perhaps somewhere nice to eat, and naturally with good railway connections.

And so Ranuska is born, named in honour of the new Queen of Utrainia. It is a balloon shaped loop, a small peninsula of land surrounded on three sides by sea. Like many Soviet-era seaside towns, it has seen better days, however some of the old grandeur still remains. The tracks may be a little overgrown, and weeds are sprouting between the cobblestones, but that grand "communism will conquer all" attitude in their architecture is still there. The town is nearly tropical, which you may think is an oxymoron for the USSR, but I draw my inspiration from a real place:

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Jan 2014 12

Adding lights to buildings

Three weeks since my last update, however all is not quiet in Utrainia. Over Christmas lots of new items were acquired, among them a pair of rail-busses, a land rover, many dozens of people, and some buildings and building supplies. I look forward to adding these to the railway.

Before Christmas however, I spent some time adding lights to Raparapa. I wanted the buildings to be illuminated, but I wanted the buildings to still be removable. To achieve this I came up with a cunning scheme using little L brackets made from metal, and tiny wee disc magnets that attach onto plates. The brackets and plates look like this:

The L brackets attach onto the walls of the buildings a small distance off the floor level. The plates are on the ground, and the magnets go in between, making ...

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