Can you smell the wood burning?....I am thinking, again, of starting a new layout (doesn't everyone). At the present time, I have four independent loops and am considering eliminating one or two and having sidings to hold a train while one completes a loop. This way, I can alternate the trains running on the same track..perhaps in the opposite direction.
My question requires only a very short answer. How many loops, that is, how many trains can you run on your present layout at the same time?.....As always, thanks.
as of this moment - none.
When I finish this top level - two
When I finish the entire layout with all three levels running - six plus a trolley.
At its present state of construction - none.
When the main stem is closed - as many as the timetable calls for.
The joker is, I operate by timetable. NOTHING simply orbits the layout. The schematic says the mainline is a closed loop, mostly double track but with one section of single track. The timetable says no train will run the entire closed loop without changing train number and without an appropriate layover in hidden staging.
I operate tinplate rolling stock (real galvenized steel!) by prototype rules. I also readily admit this is not everyone's cup of O-cha. However you choose to operate, have fun.
Chuck (modeling Central Japan in September, 1964)
Three at once.
Chris
CHRIS: Am I reading correctly as @ 14' x 6' ?
PS. THANKS TO ALL FOR YOUR INPUT.
Yes, 14' x 6'. And it's for O-27 and O-31 sized trains!
The reason for the 14' length is for passing sidings that can accomodate full O-27 passenger trains (I don't care for freight) and clear the mainline.
Lionel's three car O-27 streamline passenger set with add-on pack (5 cars total) adds up to 60 inches. Add the engine(s) and the train will be anywhere from 74-99 inches long! (depending on the engine(s)) That's up to eight feet of O-27 capable train!
I find that running with three or four O-27 passenger cars (as opposed to five) works better on the layout. That allows for a choice of steamers and deisels to be used, and the train will still fit on the sidings.
If I had used O-31 curves, instead of O-54, on the outside, the siding would have been longer than 76 inches. But the layout really looked boxy to me when using O-31 curves. O-54 really smoothed it out and allows the trains to be run a lot faster without having to tend the throttle all the time.
It's not the most exciting looking layout, but for how I like to run trains it allows for a lot of action.
I am presently running five loops and a trolley track.I am trying to put in a raised track that will be removable so I can run some of my shorter units which like to stall on the switches.Eventually I'd like to join all the loops together.As it is now I have my yard on track 1 and my industries on track 2.
Ed
Doug Murphy 'We few, we happy few, we band of brothers...' Henry V.
I have a small 6' x 9' layout. It has two loops with a reversing loop on the inside. This allows me to run two trains simultaneously.
Regards,
John O
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