EIS2 wrote: All coal accessories are a mess. I switched to logging which is much cleaner.Here is the way I cleaned up the coal on my railroad. I used our portable vacuum and placed and old teeshirt across the hose where the hose entered the cannister so that the teeshirt formed a membrane to catch the coal. I then vacuumed up the coal and retrieved it from the vaccuum hose. It made a fast and easy method to retrieve all the chunks of coal from the layout.Earl
All coal accessories are a mess. I switched to logging which is much cleaner.
Here is the way I cleaned up the coal on my railroad. I used our portable vacuum and placed and old teeshirt across the hose where the hose entered the cannister so that the teeshirt formed a membrane to catch the coal. I then vacuumed up the coal and retrieved it from the vaccuum hose. It made a fast and easy method to retrieve all the chunks of coal from the layout.
Earl
That is a great idea!
underworld
Rolo, I'd recommend against glueing the coal in place. You might want to sell the car eventually, and you'd be reducing the number of potential buyers.
If you're operating on a carpet, you definitely don't want to dump coal! Consider loads with larger particle sizes, like small stones. Make a smaller bin from cardboard or foamboard to allow easier re-loading.
If you're operating on a permanent layout, leave the small coal spills where they lay (as long they don't interfere with operation). That's basically what the real railroads do.
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