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Bringing the mountain to Mohammed: "Breaking" new ground

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Bringing the mountain to Mohammed: "Breaking" new ground
Posted by FJ and G on Monday, March 22, 2004 11:40 AM
I think it might have been Olssen or Furlow who created the scenery and then created the trackwork, but very very few modelers choose this method, and for a variety of good reasons.

Well, I'm going to try this method. I've got a stack of styrofoam that is 4 feet thick and will be carving out a river from the styrofoam, then followed by trackwork.

It is esp. exciting because this actually is how real railroads are built, tho constructors, I'm sure, don't create their own rivers--well, sometimes they do to change channels or to bring in water for the water towers.

For those who have scenery as a priority over trackwork, this I would think, would be a method one might consider. I'm looking forward to carving as soon as the house inspector gets done doing his inspecting.

--Dave Vergun
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Posted by Big_Boy_4005 on Monday, March 22, 2004 11:48 AM
I have considered this option and will probably do a modified version of that on parts of my layout.
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Posted by Anonymous on Monday, March 22, 2004 1:16 PM
It was once suggested to me when designing a layout that one should design the "lay of the land" first, then put in the tracks, as this is how the real railroads do it. David has the advantage of modeling something that actually exists.

I hope you have a good resperator for this project, David! And a good vacuum cleaner, too.

Tony
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Posted by FJ and G on Monday, March 22, 2004 1:25 PM
Thx Tony,

I've got a 6.5 HP shop vac that can pull ticks off my Beagle.
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Posted by Anonymous on Monday, March 22, 2004 1:36 PM
Dave:

Nice shop vac! You've probably already thought of this, but since you're going to be doing a lot of sanding & foam shaping, there's gonna be a s**t load of dust in the air. You probably want to close any doors to prevent it from traveling elsewhere in the house. And open any windows to let in fresh air.

Tony
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Posted by Big_Boy_4005 on Monday, March 22, 2004 2:29 PM
The secret with foam shaping is not to sand or grate, but to use a KNIFE as much as possible, thus eliminating much of the waste and need for the shopvac.

I'm just getting started on this layout, but I have dealt with many different types of foam over the years, and this pink stuff is no different.

By cutting chunks It may be possible to glue them together for some of the detail areas. Keep in mind that it isn't necessary to make everything solid foam. The material trapped inside is just wasted. It may take a little more effort to to build up land forms out of smaller pieces, but once covered, no one will ever know.

I was at Sam's club yesterday, and picked up a box of those brown paper towels. My plan is to mix a solution of white glue, soak the paper towels, and apply them to cover the foam.

NO MORE PINK, instead a nice mellow brown shell, that I can use as a base for my finished scenery. I didn't make this one up, I saw it used on a modular layout a number of years ago, and thought it was cool!!![8D]
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Posted by FJ and G on Monday, March 22, 2004 2:55 PM
Several bennies of foam:

Carve it any way you like.

If you make mistake, just glue on another piece of foam

Light weight

You can stick trees in it

You can apply paint directly to it and then throw dried clay for earth (that's my low-tech technique. The clay's fine particles are perfectly scaled for "earth" and give the paint enough texture to be believable.

I sometimes use plaster or mortar mix or whatever is handy like drywall mud, to fill in cracks around the base of the styrofoam or elsewhere.

That's my handy dandy technique that's served me well in the past.
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Posted by Anonymous on Monday, March 22, 2004 8:49 PM
Fifty years ago a feller by the name of John Allen built scenery first then installed track. Maybe you heard of his model pike...the Gorre & Daphetid. Odd-d
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Posted by Big_Boy_4005 on Tuesday, March 23, 2004 12:00 AM
Hey Odd-d, I for one am very familiar with John Allen's work. I have a number of the magazine featuring a wide range of subjects that he had truely mastered.

There are a few people here that are really into the works of Frank Ellison. Perhaps Ellison is better known in this circle because he worked in O while Allen worked in HO. However both are great pioneers in this hobby in general.
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Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, March 23, 2004 9:11 AM
Ellison and Allen were totally different but equally important to the hobby itself. Ellison was more concerned with the operation of the trains and less with the actual modelling. That is probably because in his heyday, the early forties and fifties he didn't have the sheer amount of materials to work with. Allen was more interested in modelling the railroad as a series of passing scenes. He stressed scenery and thoughtful and sometimes whimsical detail of the pike itself. I don't remember him stressing operation as much as making scenes. Perhaps it might be due to their career background. Ellison was involved in the theatre and even called his trains actors on the stage provided by the model railroad while Allen was a photographer and approached his pike as a set providing interesting if not always convincing scenes. Ellison was one who did not bother with any more scenery than was absolutely necessary for realism whie Allen would build scenery from the floor up. IMO he relied too heavily on bridges, having his trains jump from mountaintop to mountaintop on a series of bridges. Personally I liked the second version of the GD better than the third and final version. Allen was more of a pioneer in striving for realism by painting and weathering his models and populating his scenes in ways that told a story. Allen was more concerned with the vast vistas of Western scenery while Ellison was more concerned with the pounding action of heavy mainline class 1 railroading as it must have been in his day. It would be a shame for Ogaugers to ignore John Allen just because he worked in HO. Great modelling is great modelling regardless of scale. Truly both men belong in the pantheon of great model railroaders. Odd-d
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Posted by FJ and G on Tuesday, March 23, 2004 9:25 AM
One lesson that Allan could teach is learning from others, even if it was a different scale than his own.

Also I shared his dislike for plastic, IMO, the worst "advance" in model railroading, notwithstanding CTT's nice article on plastics in the may04 issue.
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Posted by FJ and G on Tuesday, March 23, 2004 9:27 AM
one other thing. you left out the other giant in model railroading, John Armstrong
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Posted by cnw1995 on Tuesday, March 23, 2004 9:32 AM
Dave, what do you dislike about plastic?

Doug Murphy 'We few, we happy few, we band of brothers...' Henry V.

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Posted by FJ and G on Tuesday, March 23, 2004 9:47 AM
Well, it is a necessary evil. It's really more about what I like about metal:

heft
keeps em tracking and rolling better
doesn't melt w/the heat or become brittle w/sunlight UV rays or flourescent lighting
solid feel
allows for better coupling (you can wack into it better)
because it's cool

the ultimate material would be steel with real rust weathering
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Posted by cnw1995 on Tuesday, March 23, 2004 10:01 AM
Dave, I agree with your 'positives' about metal. I have read the Kalmbach book about John Allen. I sure would like to learn more about Frank Ellison - he sounds like a true pioneer in this scale.

Doug Murphy 'We few, we happy few, we band of brothers...' Henry V.

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Posted by Big_Boy_4005 on Tuesday, March 23, 2004 11:24 AM
Odd-d, I like your comparison between Allen and Ellison. Here's my short version. Ellison was more analytical in his style, choosing to focus operation, electrial, and realism with only a hint of whimsey.

Allen was more of an artist who chose model railroading as his subject, and was filled with whimsey. I believe that he was also into operation, but that aspect took more of a back seat to his art.

Malcom Furlow had taken the Allen style to the extereme, virtually ignoring operation in favor pure art and highly detailed dioramas.

If we create a spectrum of art vs technical using the alphabet from A to T (which is really 1 to 20) with A being Artistic, and T being Technical we could try to place the great model railroaders on it based on their style.

Furlow would have to fall on A. Allen would be more in the EFG range. I would place Ellison in the OPQ range. I can think of someone to go on T, but most of the guys here won't know who he is. Bruce Chubb is definately a T on this scale.

There is no wrong place to fall on this spectrum, but when people with different tastes get together there can be WORDS. I would like to think that my tastes would place me somewhere near the middle, rather torn between art and technical. This is a rather awkward place to be. Where would you place your style??

Dave you are right, it is very important to follow things done by other people even if they model in a different scale, which is exactly why I still read MR. This is the reason that OGR is so different. It is DELIBERATELY NARROW IN FOCUS....... this is NOT A BAD THING, just different. In order to follow the entire hobby from an O gauge we need all three magazines. [:)]
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Posted by FJ and G on Tuesday, March 23, 2004 11:30 AM
Furlow has drawn a lot of criticism among the rivet counters. He's one of my heroes and his "artwork" is a real inspiration and a breath of fresh air. Someday, he may rank up with the top 3 icons: Allan, Ellison, and Armstrong.

Furlow is the Van Gogh of the model train world.
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Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, March 23, 2004 11:38 AM
Bruce Chubb is the creator of the Computer/Model Railroad Interface. This is a system of custom boards & software for controlling a layout with a computer.

I don't know all of what C/MRI is capable of doing, but I do know that much about Bruce Chubb.

Tony
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Posted by Big_Boy_4005 on Tuesday, March 23, 2004 11:40 AM
I need to do some more research on Armstrong's work to get a better feel as to where he falls on my spectrum. I'm most familiar with his Kalmbach book Track Planning for Realistic Operation, which has had a tremendous influence on me over the years.
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Posted by Big_Boy_4005 on Tuesday, March 23, 2004 11:52 AM
CMRI is really capable of doing anything Tony. It basicly functions as a bunch of on/off that can be controlled through a port on your computer. That's it in a nut shell. That means that it can be used to control ANYTHING!!!!! That's the beauty!

It works by sending information packets back and forth between the "switches" in the field, and the computer which processes the information.

I have this system left over from the mall, and have big plans for it![:D]
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Posted by FJ and G on Tuesday, March 23, 2004 12:53 PM
Tony,

Chubb has a nice series of articles in MR that I'm sure you've seen. A bit above my level of expertise but nice to see what you can do with a little programming.

I failed to mention the late Linn Westcott, who had a big impact on my previous layout with his method of L-girder benchwork. He also pioneered some computer techniques and had some other accomplishments.
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Posted by jkerklo on Tuesday, March 23, 2004 1:21 PM
I always thought of Ellison for his work with structures. At least, the articles I have collected from Model Builder seem to emphasize that.

Dave, by-the-way, if you are going to be creating a lot of dusty debris, I would recommend a "Dust Collector," rather than a shop vac. The dust collector moves a high volume of air at low pressure, rather than the reverse for the shop vac. More importantly, IT IS QUIETER. I have a couple I use when wood working and the reduced sound makes a big difference. They also have large collection bags.

I remember seeing some recommendation for using an electric carving knife for cutting foam. Less dust.


I like automatic train control and have a portable layout I take to RMD/TCA train shows. It employs control modules connected to isolated rail track blocks, rather than the master computer approach.

When I started building it, I first considered the master computer approach (programming is my profession) but discovered that the interface and communications circuits were more complicated than individual control modules, employing a cheap microprocessor for logic and timing. It is also much simpler to configure and install; no major programming.


John Kerklo
TCA 94-38455
www.Three-Rail.com




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Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, March 23, 2004 2:39 PM
David:

I'm afraid I've missed the recent Model Railroader articles on C/MRI. I don't subscribe to MR & I only found out about them recently.

Perhaps I'll order them through this site, if they have a back-issue ordering page.

Elliot:

I'm a computer programmer by trade. While I am interested in using a computer to control some things on my eventual layout, I'm definitely not one to "roll my own." I'm probably going to read up on C/MRI & see what it can do, and compare it to the new Layout Control System (LCS) that Train America Studios is supposed to release soon.

I have seen some web sites that offer C/MRI boards for sale. If they come ready assembled, and I go for C/MRI, I'd buy those. While I can solder & have put together a few Heathkits in my days, I've never tackled anything that could be used with a computer, and unless it's a very easy & well documented assembly sequence, I'd rather have someone else do that work.

Running wires, on the other hand, I'll do.

Tony
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Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, March 24, 2004 8:24 AM
Dave, Linn Westcott is mostly associated in my mind with tech articles. I can think of his L-girder table construction, advocacy of Homosote, and construction of the transistorized throttle. But the best thing he ever came out with is my favorite book, "101 Track Plans". I have spent hours poring over those little slices of Golden Age railroading. He managed to capture the dusty, sunbaked, quiet, early afternoon of life along the line. Many times I have mentally followed a train along the routes of those track plans. I'm not so sure how practical they are, but I used to love rooting out the little subtle bits of humor in them. Armstrong basically took up Ellison's thread and elaborated on it. Ellison was a bit more eloquent and painted more imagery in his writing where Armstrong is more plain and expository, but still a worthy successor to Ellison. This hobby does have its share of ghosts, doesn't it? Odd-d
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Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, March 24, 2004 8:35 AM
Big Boy, Almost twenty years ago I had the pleasure of meeting Malcolm Furlow at a celebration at Kalmbach's offices in Milwaukee. I mentioned that I had read and enjoyed his articles in MR and RMC. I asked him if he had read my article in MR. When I told him it was about a major kitbash of a locomotive he winced and smiled and said , wow! You're one of those technical guys. He said he would hesitate to do such a project as I wrote about saying that scenery was more his thing. He was a real nice gentleman and it was an honor to talk trains with him. BTW I also met John Olson and another star in the pantheon of great modellers, Gorgon Odegaard. But Odegaard is a subject in himself. Odd-d
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Posted by Big_Boy_4005 on Wednesday, March 24, 2004 4:31 PM
Odd-d I have your article on my shelf, but I need you to direct me to it. I have a feeling that I may have just found it, as I am a bit of a detective, and have followed your trail of clues, but your confirmation would be nice.

If I remember correctly, Trainbud is a big Ellison fan, so much so that I thought I saw somewhere, that he was considering writing a book. Perhaps the book that needs writing is one on ALL of this hobby's greatest contributors, including a chapter on Ellison.
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Posted by Richard A on Wednesday, March 24, 2004 7:18 PM
David,

If you really do this, I'd love to hear about your thought process as you get into it. If I tried to do the scenery before planning where the track went, I'm not sure I could stay true to the process. I would always be thinking about how a stretch of track would look as I developed the mountains, valleys, rivers, etc. Guess I have room to grow. Thank Heaven!
Whether your life is good or bad, trains will make it better!
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Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, March 24, 2004 9:21 PM
Big Boy, the article I was referring to was published in the November 1982 issue of MR, it was about kitbashing a MDC 2-6-0 into a 4-4-0 and using a Tyco superstructure in place of the MDC one. I wrote several other engine kitbashing articles over the years that were published in MR, Railmodel Journal and Narrow Gauge Shortline Gazette working with Al Armitage. Odd-d

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