![Very Happy :D](./images/smilies/icon_biggrin.gif)
Great to see you have already a broad panorama covering all fronts.
Those barn and shed transformations are always a source of plenty of fun.
I follow, of course!
Daniel
I think most narrow gauge model waggons start life like this... It is surprisingly easy to do. Just takes a little patience and imagination. I was looking at the one unboxed grain wagon I had which I was not sure what to do with as it had a buffer missing. I am thinking of doing the other six soon as everything has gone together nicely.Bufferstop wrote:Hi Mountain
You can't keep avoid idea down. About 50yrs ago some one suggested something similar but using 00 bodies on TT chassis for 3foot gauge NG wagons. I wanted something closer to two foot, stuck it on the back burner for a while and shoved the TT wagons in the loft. A couple of house moves later they resurfaced, and I started thinking about them. In the meantime I'd been to South Africa and seen the two foot gauge with Cape Gauge bodies on double bogies, so when in Cheltenham Model Centre I spotted a box of loose N gauge bogies, some missing a pair of wheels or a coupler I dug deep like it was a sweetie jar and handed over a satisfyingly small amount of cash.
N gauge bogies under TT3 bodies along side 4mm locos and stock gave a convincingly good representation narrow gauge. Had them on a transfer siding for a few years, before another house move when I passed them on to a mate.
You do yourself a great injustice. You put many of us to shame with your modelling.Mountain wrote:Yes, but if I buy them they will be too perfect and show up my homemade ones that I have on the other locos.