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British Railway Modelling

BRM (British Railway Modelling)
BRM November 2013
EditorEdited by an Editorial Team[1]
Former editorsDavid Brown, John Emmerson, Ben Jones, Debbie Wood, Andy McVittie
Staff writersPhil Parker, Andy York
Frequency4 weekly
PublisherWarners Group Publications plc
First issue1993
CountryUK
Based inBourne, Lincolnshire
LanguageEnglish
WebsiteAbout British Railway Modelling magazine
ISSN0968-0764

British Railway Modelling (BRM) is a monthly British magazine about model railways published by Warners Group Publications plc.[2] It has been in publication since 1993, originally under the tagline "A Colourful New Look at Hobby".[3] The magazine has been based in Bourne, Lincolnshire, since its inception.[4]

History

The magazine was launched in 1993 issue and the first editor was David Brown, an experienced journalist with a passion for model railways. Initially the use of colour throughout the magazine was a key selling point when many other magazines were predominantly printed in black and white.[5] The magazine covered areas traditionally covered by the established model railway press, such as layouts, weathering, kit building and scratch building.

From the outset, the magazine featured minority scales and standards. The premier issue had an EM gauge layout on its cover[6] and by its fourth issue featured a 2mm Finescale on the cover, Helsby, Tumill & Haddon, very much a minor scale.[7] Other minority and finer scale standards were featured from the outset too. The magazine also had many well known modellers within the hobby, featuring from its early issues such as Jack Ray, first chairman of the Gauge O Guild and owner of the well known Crewchester garden railway,[8] and David Jenkinson.

There was a definite lean towards high quality modelling and prototype information within BRM but it has also covered the collectable end of the hobby too. For instance BRM featured for many years The Chronicle of Lock's Siding, written by the Reverend Alan Cliff and was the longest running continuous monthly series by a freelance writer in the history of the world's model railway press.[9]

John Emerson followed David Brown as editor, Brown remaining as Managing Editor for a number of years. After Emerson stepped down after many years, Ben Jones took over but left as editor in early 2017 to join the model railway manufacturer, Heljan. He was succeeded by Andy McVittie and then Debbie Wood as 'Brand Content Editor' across Warners' portfolio of magazines, websites, email newsletters and exhibitions. The BRM staff team includes Andy York and Phil Parker.

The magazine is published every four weeks,[10] with new volumes commencing with the April edition.

RMweb

RMweb was started by Andy York, evolving as a private website forum over a number of years. Funding initially was by means of donation drives, especially needed when the site became very popular and busy, increasing the costs. The site was acquired by Warners Group Publications with Andy remaining as editor, assisted by Phil Parker,

RMweb enjoys close links with many manufactures including, Accurascale, Hornby, Dapol, Kernow Model Centre, Bachmann.

RMweb celebrated its 10th birthday on 15 March 2015.[11][12]

With the purchase of other magazines by Warners Group Publications (Garden Rail, Narrow Gauge Railways and Model Engineering), the RMweb forum was restructured to allow these to use it as their discussion forum.[citation needed]

A number of layouts and projects first started on RMweb have gone on to be featured in BRM.[citation needed]

On 26 April 2020, RMweb held a virtual Members Day 2020 in aid of NHS Charities Together.[13]

Model Railway Exhibitions

Crowds at RMweb Live 2014.

The magazine has also put on its own exhibitions [14] throughout the country - venues have included Doncaster, Harrogate, Peterborough and The London Festival of Railway Modelling at Alexandra Palace. The latter is in association with The Model Railway Club [15] which is the oldest model railway society in the world, having been formed in 1910,[16] demonstrating BRM's place within the hobby.

BRM's first show was The Festival Of Railway Modelling at Doncaster Racecourse in 1997.[17] The first show drew on the many layouts which had featured in BRM since 1993.

As well as BRM's own shows, RMweb hosted its own show at the Ricoh Stadium in Coventry 2014[18] and it was intended for this to be the first of an annual RMweb show, however on 14 December 2014, Andy York announced that they would not "be holding a comparable event during 2015 at the same venue" as there were insufficient visitor numbers.[19]

References

  1. ^ British Railway Modelling, October 2020
  2. ^ Warner's Group Publications plc, What We Do
  3. ^ British Railway Modelling, April 1993
  4. ^ Lincolnshire Life magazine, March 2015
  5. ^ British Railway Modelling, April 1993
  6. ^ British Railway Modelling, April 1993
  7. ^ British Railway Modelling, July 1993
  8. ^ British Railway Modelling, June 1993
  9. ^ Jack the Station Cat - About the Author
  10. ^ British Railway Modelling Promotion Details
  11. ^ RMweb 10 Years Old
  12. ^ Lincolnshire Life magazine, March 2015
  13. ^ [1] Virtual Members' Day Exhibition - the layouts
  14. ^ "British Railway Modelling Exhibitions". Archived from the original on 30 December 2014. Retrieved 30 December 2014.
  15. ^ "The London Festival of Railway Modelling". Archived from the original on 3 December 2014. Retrieved 30 December 2014.
  16. ^ The Model Railway Club
  17. ^ [2] Milton Keynes Model Railway Society MKMRS News No. 59 February 1997
  18. ^ RMweb Live 2014
  19. ^ [3] RMweb Live 2014