I did on my last layout. Just 2 pieces of old rusty 0-27 track that I made run off the edge of the table to nowhere. Put extra ties and made it look abandon by grass and brush all over it. Also had a Bumper I made look beat up to look like it was a siding.
I did it on my last 2 layouts by putting old track outside in the rain and sun and got that dilapidated look. Then I had an area where I laid the track where it "use to connect to a branch main." I modeled where the switch use to connect and the applied random ground cover over the added ties. A good area for this is some corner or out of the way area. It doesn't require much space. Sorry, no pix.
This idea was featured in a HO magazine a few years ago. They had a number of ideas to add realism. Rusted rail tops, light brown ties, severely weathered structures, etc.
Dennis
TCA#09-63805
Aren't those usually called Halloween layouts?
Seems to be a very good idea ... in fact a great idea .... it would add some realism to a layout ... instead of the same ole = same ole ... additions like that is what makes the highly praised layouts differ from the run of the mill ones . There's nothing more bland and extremely unimaginative than a grass turf covered piece of plywood with buildings just set there .
IDM1991There is something mysterious about walking on or cycling along the many abandoned railway lines in North America. Has anyone tried replicating an abandoned right-of-way on their layout?
There is something mysterious about walking on or cycling along the many abandoned railway lines in North America. Has anyone tried replicating an abandoned right-of-way on their layout?
No. I see too much of that in real life.
IDM1991 There is something mysterious about walking on or cycling along the many abandoned railway lines in North America. Has anyone tried replicating an abandoned right-of-way on their layout?
Only during the process of tearing down an old layout and building a new one.
Alton Junction
I have not however I saw it in ho scale, if I remember they had ho scale track without ballast that were well run and rusted, (like stored in an attic) and they had tiny trees like 1:200 and put a few between the rails and put some grass on the outer wooden parts.
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