Kevin Johnson
Active Member
Rob the colours of the Wainwright liveried P Class locos are very nice.
Well, young sir was some three weeks late as it was.What would have happened if you were relying on Hermes?
Rob the colours of the Wainwright liveried P Class locos are very nice.

Rob thanks for sharing.Hi Kevin.
Indeed they are. The photo was quite poor but the livery is lovely. I've mentioned before my desire to give the SE&CR ' collection ' a proper home, as in, use them.
Bringing them together like this emphasises the need for this.
Here's an enhanced view taken some years ago on Bleat Wharf.
View attachment 257435
Rob
Well, young sir was some three weeks late as it was.
've mentioned before my desire to give the SE&CR ' collection ' a proper home, as in, use them.
Bringing them together like this emphasises the need for this.

Given the number of SECR locos now available - Stewarts Lane or Bricklayers Arms spring to mind as proper homes large enough for them to flaunt their brass domes.![]()


Yes, I suspect this is something that one could debate endlessly and never reach a conclusion. Rapido have obviously gone to a lot of effort to create a range of coaches with several different styles of items such as roofs (clerestory, arc etc) but none of them are genuine models of any real prototype. Presumably their thinking is that the pre grouping market is too small and diverse to otherwise make money. Other manufacturers, however, have created models of genuine pre grouping coaching stock. Interestingly, the prices are similar, so the only benefit to the consumer is having a coach in ‘your’ company’s livery. An alternative approach could be to model a real prototype (so pleasing the modellers of that company) and then painting it in different liveries. As I said, many ways to skin a cat and I’ll own they do look pretty. Personally, though, I’ll stick to my lonely furrow and keep making the etched brass ones… (each to their own!).
Nigel
I haven’t seen examples of the Rapido Evolution stock yet and I’m not a potential customer. The coaches look very nice in photographs.
My comment would be ‘nothing new under the sun’.
Faced with same problem of many similar-ish but different coaches carrying multiple different liveries, and needing sales sufficient to recoup the capital cost of tooling, Bassett-Lowke did exactly what Rapido have done. In 1909.
The 1909 Bassett-Lowke coaches were lithographed tinplate and made by Carette. Apart from the livery, the sides were identical for the different Railway companies represented: MR, LSWR, LNWR, GWR and GNR (all made in gauges 0 and 1). The coach ends were produced in two versions to allow either an elliptical roof (LSW, LNW, GN) or clerestory roof (GW and Midland). The coaches were slightly shorter than scale but beautifully printed. Although of generalised design in respect of window size and spacing, the printed representation of the livery and panelling accurately copied the respective company styles. The approach used for the coaches made it economically possible to produce worthy trains for the various contemporary scale model locomotives offered by Bassett-Lowke.
I wonder if Rapido are aware of the long history of using the same approach to address the same problem?
Martin
It's an odd one this... I am also one who can't really tell the difference when it comes to older coaching stock, so if I were still running passenger trains, I don't think it would bother me.I don’t know how much of a “purist” one needs to be to find these on the ok, or not-ok side of the acceptable line.
I do recall a very heated discussion on RMW regarding the Dapol 6W milk tanks which apparently are some kind of GW/LMS hybrid, which is a shame. Adrian Swain came in for a lot of quite abusive stick for simply telling the truth. Had they been one thing or the other, the “purist” could have made an informed decision whether to purchase or not, and those with more catholic tastes would have been none the wiser, and would therefore not have purchased fewer.
As it is I find myself in the purist camp on that one, and won’t buy them because there’s no pleasure in owning something that I know to be wrong. Apparently they’re quite difficult to fix too.

