How To Buy A Ticket (1)
Go to ticket window, give "the man" your destination, pay him "money" and he would put the ticket ...
... then hand it to you. The process took a matter of seconds.
How To Buy A Ticket (2)
Here is No 3 son's experience at S N C F Cannes. He is travelling to Nice. Being a bit of a slacker linguistically speaking, he did set the machine to speak English. Looking at the results, fbb thinks that was VERY wise.
2. Check route. Does the 1910 stop at St Augustin - for Airport? Wait for screen to scroll to check.
5 Tell it you are not a member of some sort of secret society.
7 If you are awkward and don't want to go to any of those, type in your chosen destination. Spell it correctly or the location will not exist! The machine might read your mind.
8 No 3 son's next picture was fuzzy; but he did it anyway! Or actually he didn't. He was asked to choose his route; there only was one to choose.
The transaction could now proceed - well maybe
9 Did he really want a ticket? Or several tickets? Or four other options?
13 And what price did he want to pay?
More complex decisions are needed here. The 1910 and 1917 are TER (local) trains branded ZOU. But you cannot have a First Class ride on the 1910.
Why not?
The 1935 "InOui" is an "Inter City" brand from S N C F and thus the fare for a short local journey is higher.
Why?
But after 14 screens (fbb omitted a couple of "confirmation" screens for his and our readers' sanity) we all need a break.
To be continued on Saturday .
Today?
Is the evening before All Saints' Day a k a All Hallowes E'en. In the ancient Church Calendar, the idea was that, in preparation for a day when ALL saints, all Godly people, should be remembered as an example to everyone, anything evil should be expelled by Practice, Prayer and Penitence.
So, how come we treat evil as some kind of joke? How come we extol the delights of e.g. model cars promoting the sinister and potentially damaging things in life ...
Harmless fun? Fun, it may be; but certainly NOT harmless.
... and much worse throughout our society.
How To Make A Building Smaller
Some time back fbb bought one of these. It was so long ago that he has forgotten why he bought it and what irs official purpose was.
But it didn't fit; the proportions seemed all wrong with the structure too tall for its "footprint". But you cannot cut resin buildings without specialist equipment. They shatter like glass!
So, following his modelling mentors Bill Bodge and Fred Fudge, fbb decided not to make the building lower but to make the ground higher!fbb added a base to the wall, covering up a few mil of the windows then added new frames, also a bodge ...... where six panes "portrait" become eight "landscape'. Then fbb added a gentle but almost imperceptible slope of the "land".
A repaint finally changes the character of the building more significantly.More detailed work is to be done not least the replacement of the white plastic soil!
P.S. Found the box.Called a "Station Office", it would have been better labelled as a "Goods Yard Office". Hornby currently offers it at £53.49 (OUCH but "out of stock") but retailers seem to be wiling to accept anything from £25 to £40. fbb would not have paid more than the lowest rate!
Hampshire Model are asking £23.80.
Next Newbury to Didcot blog : Fri 1 Nov
No comments:
Post a Comment