From when my Parents gave me my first train set for a Christmas present as a child, I have had an interest in model railways. I originally started in "OO" gauge, but have also built in "N" and "O" gauge. The last layout I built was my exhibition layout "Holmehurst" which was in "O" gauge, and I exhibited it around the country. Photos of it can be seen by following this link.

I inherited some "OO9" rolling stock from my late father, including a loco I built from a white metal kit for him, and ever since living on our working narrowboat Hadar I have been thinking about building a "OO9" layout.

For those who do not know, "OO9" is "OO" scale, which is 4mm to 1ft, but the track and rolling stock are narrow gauge, equivalent to 2ft gauge in real life. Modelling-wise this means that I can used standard "OO" scale buildings, people, scenery etc. of which there is a far greater range of ready built items and kits to choose from, but it has the advantage that the reduced size of the track and rolling stock means that curves can be tighter than for standard gauge, without losing a realistic look within a restricted layout size.

I had thought about building a layout in our garden alongside our mooring at the Saltisford Canal Centre, but after much thought decided that this would not be practical. However I built a small layout (now dismantled) which sat on the shelf above the display cabinet, in our saloon, which houses my "O" gauge rolling stock. Having finished it, my wife Jo suggested that when we stop selling coal I could build a layout in the hold. As we stopped selling coal at the end of 2016.

This is a full record of the building of the original layout, and having moved into a flat in Warwick and sold our narrowboat, this will now cover the building of the New Hadarford in our flat.

Please feel free to leave comments, I am always interested in suggestions or questions.

Monday, 15 December 2025

Curtains and Start of Wiring

 This morning I started fitting curtains to the windows of the terrace but only got as far as 2 pairs as I started to get the hand shakes, so I stopped as I didn't want to spoil any.


This afternoon I made up a cable from the controller to the baseboard, and fitted 5 terminal blocks under the baseboards, one for the wires coming from the controller, the other 4 either side of the 2 baseboard joint ready for the inter-baseboard wiring.

Wiring connected to the back of the controller

Other end of the wires connected to a terminal block under the baseboard

Completed cable with cable tidy fitted

One inter-baseboard terminal block

Matching inter-baseboard terminal block on the other side

Future wiring will not be done in situ, I will remove each baseboard one at a time, and tip them vertically so they will be easier to work on rather than from underneath.

Keith

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