Sounds like you could use the Garden Railways pull out plans for most of what you are looking for. Some of the older plans are available at Sidestreet Bannerworks. If you are a subscriber to Garden Railways you can get all the pull out plans since they switched to the new pdf format for free by searching thier site for pull out plans. If you are not a subscriber you can get the current pull out plan in pdf format from the same place. If a plan set you are looking for is no longer available from Sidestreet you may want to look at the back issues of Garden Railways and see if the issue that has the wanted plan in it is still available. Also be sure to check out the pull out plans discussion forum at the bottom of the list here.
If you'll go to http://www.trainweb.org/nasrr/caboose_interior.html, you can see what the inside of MY bobber caboose looks like. There's also a reference on the bottom of the page for a book (now long out of print) which has a wealth of information about railroad cabeese.
As for car plans, I've got copies of most of the plans that GR has ever produced. Contact me via PM or email (notpmah.leachim@sbcglobal.net) and we can discuss arrangments for getting some plans in your hands.
Mike Hampton
Thank you gentlemen! I will try what you have suggested.
Allen
Funny thing, I was thinking of others sharing plans which I thought was a good idea but it is up to the person to share.
William
Hi Steam1800
You may find this link useful it does have a bit on interior in it as well as the construction.
http://www.trains.com/trccs/forums/300623/ShowPost.aspx
It would be well worth your while going through the pull out plans threads to find the other construction pieces done by toenail ridge.
And the kit bashing and scratch building treads to find the structure he built
regards John
John,
Another good idea. Thanks! I took a look at those assembly steps and he does a bang up job. Now I'm anxious to get started especially since it's snowing again! When I get the plans I'll give it a shot!
I guess while I'm on the subject of not knowing what I'm doing yet, and G-Scale Plans, where do I go to find track side structures? You know, Coal Tipples, Water Tanks, Sanding Towers, Forest Service Fire Towers, Milk Platforms, Stock Pens and Loading Chutes, Freight Warehouses, Old Hotels, etc. etc. I know I'm asking a lot, but now that I'm retired, I have nothing but time! Money, now that's another story in itself!!
Another place for building kits and plans is Smith Pond Junction you can find thier web site at http://www.spjrr.com If you click my logo and look at the buildings section of my website there's a little write up about a Smith Pond Junction building I made.
Jack
Allen: Welcome! I'm pretty much new here myself. This is a very friendly board.
K, I'd like to amplify on Allen's question: I want to know how a coal tipple works. I want to scratchbuild my trackside items, but I need to know how a given structure is supposed to work. Like a coal tipple. I've never been around coal in my life. I have seen one pix of an ash dump (?)--y'know, where they emptied the fireboxes--and that was years ago. Just two rails over a long hole? How'd they empty it? Sanding towers: how'd they keep the sand from freezing in the wintertime? Yet all I ever see is a rectangular building on piles. Bet there'd have to be at least a brick furnace underneath, right? And mine heads. I see plenty of pixes of gantries with 'thingys' on top, but what do they do besides haul the men/coal up (and down?) where's the power linkage to make one work, and the building to house the machinery? That sort of stuff. From what I know of logging firsthand, most saw mill kits are woefully inaccurate. I'm not complaining, but as long as I intend to build the thing, why not make it as approximately correct as practicable? (Note the wiggle room I left<g>)
I'm getting ready to start turning an LGB pumper car into a Porter-type 0-2-0. Where's a good place to find spoked drivers?
Thanks, Les
I would like to build canyons like the D&RGW through Royal Gorge or the Central Pacific through those deep slot canyons with trestles like the Dale Creek Trestle, tunnels, snow sheds like near Cisco, 8' radius curves and alike. I think I might even try to tunnel under the mountain and maybe try to curve the track up around the mountain like the old D&RGW Narrow gauge through Colorado. I'm thinking of starting with Bachmann Spectrum for motive power and hand building the cars. Mike Hampton knows what I'm talking about with respect to the rolling stock.
Mind you I'm new at this and I have an ambitious project ahead of me that probably take me years to finish, but I'm up for the challenge!
(Ruff and Ready!)
Les,
Sounds like your going down the same road as I plan to travel. Good luck! Maybe we can share ideas or answers to some questions along the way!
In a word, "no" but i'm sure pleanty of other people do, good luck.
Ian
You lost me Ian? By the way, what is that photo at the bottom of your screen? Do you happen to know how to make a jig for trestle bents? I know your into concrete, but it doesn't hurt to ask!
steam mate;
I know very little about this subject but i have a book which goes into great detail about how to make bridges and that includes trestles. It is a Kalmback book, if you are interested i will track it down.
With regard to my photo, i did not do this; the people that run the forum did. i am not too good with computers and have no idea as to how to fix it. My wife is a bit more knowledgable about this and she is going to help me fix it up.
Rgds ian
Ian,
Thank you. I will search for this book that you are speaking of!
K:
Many, many thanks for the links. I was going to use woodburners on the layout, but decided that coal tipples were more interesting than piles of wood here 'n there. The coal can be shipped in from 'elsewhere', possibly giving rise to one more operation. I have only 3 in mind: sawmill (of which I'll build a facsimile from the one in my youth that I actually hauled logs to); a potash 'mine' because part of the RR is going to have to circumvent the fireplace ash pile; and a stockyard, again, of which I am familiar. I don't want a 'town' per se. Perhaps a general store.
I think I'm going to begin scratchbuilding a flat car to the same 'scale' as the Bachmann bobber; it's at least a starting point while I try to find a good Porter pix to copy from--or any 0-4-0, for that matter.
Les Whitaker
Hope so, Allen! I'm building (?) a test track soon to get a 'feel' for this big stuff. I'm going to use track power on the outdoors RR because of initial expense. Then, possibly in May, I'll lay the first PP line. Dunno exactly where, yet. I have abt 20 x 60', a huge space to an old 027'er, but I suspect not so huge in this gauge. I like the code 332 rail: it's big and tough-looking. My only piece of rolling stock is a Bachmann bobber at the moment.
I'm going to dig a trench, tamp in gravel, and lay track. I'll possibly be smarter--or more satisfied--next year when I see how it winters over. I have a side problem: my ground is all heavy, impermeable clay, so the track trenches are going to be drainage ditches to some degree. Ground slippage is minimal. Glacier-like, actually.
One thing I will definitely have to do is build trestle. Lots and lots of trestle because the ground slopes badly.
Anyway, good luck!
Sounds good Les! I have the same type soil although it is fairly level. Good luck with it and let me know how the construction goes. You'd be suprised how much you can fit in your space!
hoofe116 wrote:I think I'm going to begin scratchbuilding a flat car to the same 'scale' as the Bachmann bobber; it's at least a starting point while I try to find a good Porter pix to copy from--or any 0-4-0, for that matter.Les Whitaker
If you haven't already, you might want to Google "Porter Locomotive" and see how many sites pop up. Last I checked there were over 500,000.
Mike & DD1:
Thanks, guys, for the info. Since this will be my first 'scratchbuild' (using an LGB handcar power unit) I'm not expecting a lot of from it in the way of 'cool looking'. <g> (Sharp part of the learning curve, etc). I just want some motive power for my RR so I can lay some outside track and get something rolling. That's the best way to learn anything, I've found. (Well, up to a point, but let's not be picky).
Mike, I just have to tell you that Model RR helped keep me from going off the deep end when I moved from an Ozarks high school to a suburban high school in '59. Ouch. That magazine is worth every penny it costs. They were trying to incorporate Lionel's exploding boxcars and missle launchers into model RR-ing. That was before they got away from writing about Hi Rail altogether. I've signed up for GR, haven't gotten my first copy yet, but Klambach has a first-rate stable of tech writers. RR Model Craftsman for some reason has always left me cold and I dunno why. I guess because they're so serious. I don't do this for serious. Perhaps they're too near 'rivet counters'. No criticism of the mag intended, just my opinion.
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