MANY FINE MODELS
DISPLAYED AT EXHIBITION locomotives, machines & SHIPS. RESULTS OF YEARS OF WORK BY CRAFTSMEN. The modelling of locomotives, machines and ships included in the Model Engineering Section at the Centennial Exhibition is a tribute to the standard of work in. all parts of New Zealand. Many of, the models have taken years of spare time work to complete and all of them have intricate details and a finish not excelled in the originals themselves. One of the many interesting pieces of work is a model of the first Leyland fire brigade engine used in New Zealand. It has been made by a fireman in the employ of the Petone Fire Board, and is a beautiful model complete io the last detail. It took ten years to make, and all its parts were made with a foot-power lathe. The engine is a working model and has pneumatic tires. Every nut and bolt was made by its creator ,and it has also a complete set of firemen’s equipment, including leather belts, helmets, hatchets, and keys for turning on water cocks. The pumping apparatus on the model engine pumps 10 gallons a minute. Another particularly fine model is that of a railway goods crane made to a one-inch scale by Mi' R. S. Bendei, of Wellington. The crane works exactly as the one used in the Wellington yards, and Is fitted with a Westinghouse braking system, is propeilj sprung, and the only difference between it and the original is that the model is spick and span and not begrimed with soot and smoke. In its tool box are bottlepacks, beautifully machined and capable of lifting a load of one hundredweight, although they arc only one and a half .inches high. The lay-out of an electric railway station, completely wired, is anothei feature in the display. In the marine exhibits is a particularly fine model of the Flotilla Leader, H.M.S. Shakespeare, housed in a glass case. By moving a switch beneath the case, the engines of the ship are put into operation, and it is a fascinating experience to hear the whine of the engines of this tiny warship. A model of a torpedo boat destroyer in fighting trim with all its fittings painted grey, was made by Mr E. H. A. Furbey, who served on the ship modelled. II is a working model and its creator spent many happy hours watching it circumnavigate a small lake when undergoing trials. To the average visitor the working of the machines is their greatest charm, but to the creators of these minute marvels of engineering their .fascination lies in the changing of design and experimentation of new ideas for their construction.
Unusual in design and appearance are two modelled ships made out of cardboard and fashioned with a poc-ket-knife and a hacksaw blade, by a man who occupied himself with modelling while in hospital. A model, of the ship Santa Maria, in which Columbus sailed to America is a particularly fine piece of work involving delicate woodwork and an extensive knowledge of rigging. The man who made it had great difficulty in getting’ a suitable material lor the sails, but finally he solved his problem when he saw a 7s lid shirt in an outfitter's window, which had the right texture and pattern for tiny sails on a medieval sailing ship. They have been treated with a water-proofing substance and look remarkably real The whole exhibit lias been arranged by the Wellington Model Engineering Society, and members of the society are always in attendance to relate the history of the models and the details of their working to visitors to this section.
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Wairarapa Times-Age, 24 November 1939, Page 6
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608MANY FINE MODELS Wairarapa Times-Age, 24 November 1939, Page 6
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