Chadbury: A Town and Industrial Scape in '0' Gauge  
Author(s): Eric Bottomley
Published by Pen and Sword
Publication Date:  Available in all formats
ISBN: 9781473876347
Pages: 0

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ISBN: 9781473876347 Price: INR 1695.99
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Most people's perception of a model railway is an arrangement of track work, decorated with some buildings and a cursory backdrop rising briefly to a sloping ceiling. Not so with Chadbury. When you walk into what was a 17ft square, double garage, you enter another world. The eyes look up before they look down at a painted backdrop, which is 8ft high and painted in oils, with watercolor landscapes of the Pennine hills. A dark satanic sky rises above the 'Cliff' cotton mill, which is 7ft wide to a tower top at 40 inches high, along with with 166 windows.

As you enter, on the left you see a canal basin surrounded by factories that continue around the layout until the town of Chadbury is reached. The doorway is bridged by a girder bridge, which completes a continuous circular track. To the left lies the shed area, to the right lies the station. At a lower level to the main layout lies a street lined with terraced houses and further industrial and wharf buildings serving another canal. Creating the various buildings has been a great interest of to the author who has demonstrated how he builds and weathers them in the book. All the buildings light up, providing both a daytime and nighttime look to the layout.

It is DCC operated, and the loco stock is ex-LMS and LNER in a begrimed BR livery. Notes on materials used, tips on weathering and building dimensions are all there to help, and hopefully inspire, the would-be modeler. The book includes over 100 photographs and a detailed track plan.
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Most people's perception of a model railway is an arrangement of track work, decorated with some buildings and a cursory backdrop rising briefly to a sloping ceiling. Not so with Chadbury. When you walk into what was a 17ft square, double garage, you enter another world. The eyes look up before they look down at a painted backdrop, which is 8ft high and painted in oils, with watercolor landscapes of the Pennine hills. A dark satanic sky rises above the 'Cliff' cotton mill, which is 7ft wide to a tower top at 40 inches high, along with with 166 windows.

As you enter, on the left you see a canal basin surrounded by factories that continue around the layout until the town of Chadbury is reached. The doorway is bridged by a girder bridge, which completes a continuous circular track. To the left lies the shed area, to the right lies the station. At a lower level to the main layout lies a street lined with terraced houses and further industrial and wharf buildings serving another canal. Creating the various buildings has been a great interest of to the author who has demonstrated how he builds and weathers them in the book. All the buildings light up, providing both a daytime and nighttime look to the layout.

It is DCC operated, and the loco stock is ex-LMS and LNER in a begrimed BR livery. Notes on materials used, tips on weathering and building dimensions are all there to help, and hopefully inspire, the would-be modeler. The book includes over 100 photographs and a detailed track plan.
Table of contents
  • Cover
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Dedication
  • CONTENTS
  • Introduction
  • Chadbury
  • Track Plan
  • Making a Factory Building
  • Making Terraced Houses
  • Cliff Mill
  • C.W.S
  • The Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway Company Goods Warehouse
  • Howells Engineering
  • McKennas Glass
  • G. Hancock & Sons Timber Merchants
  • Henshaw Electrical
  • F.J. Lewis & Sons Engineers
  • Canal Warehouse & Basin
  • The Marian Mill
  • Victoria Hotel
  • The Steel Girder Bridge
  • The Town Gardens
  • Bottomley’s Model Shop
  • Pauldens (Store)
  • Bridgewater Street
  • Picket Fencing
  • Locomotive Shed
  • Water Tower & Coaling Stage
  • Chadbury Station
  • Signal Box & Footbridge
  • Trackwork Wiring & Sound
  • Lighting of Buildings
  • Weathering
  • Recycling
  • Footnote
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