We all have our favorite engines and consists and we all have amassed a collection of engines and rolling stock on shelves, in boxes and on sidings.
Question: ....Do you tend to run the same items or do you rotate the trains on a regular basis?
(ie, aside from "holiday" stuff)
Side question: How often have you changed the overall look of your layout?
(ie, while keeping the same track plan and layout size)
As always, many thanks.
I tend to rotate engines on and off the layout very frequently. That is, unless I have recently bought a new favorite engine; then it may stay on the track for a few run sessions. I do have two engines that get lots more run time than all the others though.
I don't change the rolling stock much at all. I can't remember the last time my inner loop didn't have a 5 car passenger set on it. Sometimes I might add or change a freight car on the outer loop, but it is pretty much unchanged too.
I like Plasticville a lot, and have far more of it than I can put on the layout at one time. So every few months I go and change out a building or two. I also change the buildings on my tables for the modular club I am in nearly every time I set them up
I am looking forward to the replies here,
J White
I mainly run 4 trains sometimes will change out for a while but presently that's it. I need to fix one engine and finish my 6th loop ( one that's done is a around the room ceiling loop) The rest are either packed away or on shelves. a few have never been run but there on shelves at the moment. ( William steam girls set, Lionel NYC train set with command control ( one of the first tmcc sets)
Life's hard, even harder if your stupid John Wayne
http://rtssite.shutterfly.com/
I rotate all engines and cars. All are on display on shelves or on the setup. 10 engines, 75 rolling stock both passenger and freight. 50 autos, 200 people 25 accessories. Mixture of both modern and post war.
I just changed the setup after about 2 years. Added about 20 more square feet to it and switched to 072 and 054 curves, eliminating almost all of my Super O track.
I have a "time table" and I run certain types of trains (eg through freight, local freight, inter city freight, hot shot passenger, local mixed train etc) each train runs at a certain "time" of the day and I adjust lighting conditions to accomodate the time of the day (night effects with black light and paint that glows in black light). Only certain engines are used on certain types of trains, and the consist varies with each run depending on the destinations of each car (the chemical plant always gets tank cars and covered hoppers, the packing plant always gets reefers and stock cars etc) .
Asside from adding scenic details as the mood strikes me, after every three trains run, I change the cars and trucks on the layout and I have over 200 that I rotate in and out of certain locations (oil trucks go to the refinery, cement mixers and dump trucks go to the cement plant etc).and, of course, I actively switch the rolling stock at the various sidings.
I have a "script" that I follow when I run trains and a card routing system for rolling stock that I simplified from what the "serious model railroaders" use. I guess I am inspired more by Frank Ellison than by Tony Koester.
What I do would not suit everyone, but I have had the same layout for 25 years (and have operated it this way for all 25 of them) and it has kept me amused, busy and satisfied. I can't ask for more out of a hobby.
Little Tommy
Really enjoyed reading your replies. Thanks, so much.
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