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Stony Yard RR

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Stony Yard RR
Posted by ondrek on Tuesday, August 28, 2007 10:56 PM

FINNALY!

I have started after 6yrs of "...we'll build it next summer..."

1.7 meg video with sound, dial up beware

and if your at work, turn the sound down before you play.  Smile [:)]

Kevin 

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Posted by altterrain on Tuesday, August 28, 2007 11:11 PM

Could not get it to work in Firefox or IE, firewall on or off.

-Brian 

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Posted by kstrong on Tuesday, August 28, 2007 11:14 PM

Looks like you're off to a good start. Keep us posted on the progress.

Later,

K

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Posted by ondrek on Wednesday, August 29, 2007 7:56 AM
 altterrain wrote:

Could not get it to work in Firefox or IE, firewall on or off.

-Brian 

It seems to work for my Firefox at work, not just home, work Firefox is Ver. 2.0.0.6

its a quicktime movie, so maybe you dont have apple's quicktime plug in.

Kevin 

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Posted by altterrain on Wednesday, August 29, 2007 12:50 PM

Nope that's not it. I have the plug in. It tries to load up, I get the quicktime "Q" then it goes to a broken image "Q", quite odd! May be a ISP (VerizonFIOS) problem.

-Brian 

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Posted by emipapa on Wednesday, August 29, 2007 2:34 PM

Looking GREAT, keep us posted

Ron

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Posted by Rex in Pinetop on Wednesday, August 29, 2007 3:36 PM

My browser goes to the site but doesn't play anything.  All I get is a blank screen.  I must not be holding my mouth right.

Rex

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Posted by jhsimpson62 on Thursday, August 30, 2007 6:11 AM
Kevin. Great start. Keep us posted on the progress. Jack
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Posted by ondrek on Thursday, August 30, 2007 8:21 AM

Ok, here is the Gscale folder the movie is sitting in...

http://www.vermontel.net/~kevin_ondre/G_scale_Train/

you can see the few images are listed there and the movie file is listed there too.

you can right click on the movie file and save it to your desktop, play it, and then delete it if you wish.  or try clicking on it and see if it plays in your browser that way.  not sure why some can watch it and others cant...its nothing special, just a quicktime movie... 

it works in my work computer (winxp) in firefox and loads in the IE7 

Kevin 

 

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Posted by MTCarpenter on Thursday, August 30, 2007 12:39 PM

Worked for me in FF fine.

Looks very good so far!!

"Measurement is the way created things have of accounting for themselves." ~ A.W. Tozer
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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, August 30, 2007 5:28 PM
 ondrek wrote:

FINNALY!

I have started after 6yrs of "...we'll build it next summer..."

1.7 meg video with sound, dial up beware

and if your at work, turn the sound down before you play.  Smile [:)]

http://www.vermontel.net/~kevin_ondre/G_scale_Train/Stony_Yard_construction_01.mov

Kevin 

Had to play it with sound way up, bad day here! And it did cheer me up!!!!! Thank you Cowboy [C):-)]

Looks great and next you shall have a all out yard!!!! Congrats!

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Posted by ondrek on Sunday, September 9, 2007 8:04 AM

I have a temp update to the construction pics.  just click on the link in the original post.  no music this time no title screens either, so you cant tell what day is what.  I will get those in there latter today maybe.

 getting those little screws in the track joiners and having it as level as possible and ballasting is harder than i though it was going to be.

Kevin 

 

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Posted by emipapa on Sunday, September 9, 2007 8:31 AM

It's looking good Kevin, keep up the good work. How were you able to take over the whole area without getting in trouble??

Keep us posted,

Ron

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Posted by ondrek on Sunday, September 9, 2007 6:41 PM
 emipapa wrote:

It's looking good Kevin, keep up the good work. How were you able to take over the whole area without getting in trouble??

Keep us posted,

Ron

ah...thats the trick of this layout...its large, but it takes very little yard actually.  we will still be able to use the center of the yard for playing croquet and such.  also there is plenty of room in the center of the yard for a bench so the wife can sit and watch the train go around and a round, which is what she really wanted, she didnt want a lot of switches.

 

So, we have 2 passenger stations, and 2 freight stations.  so we all win.  plus this design takes less time to build.

Kevin 

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Posted by S&G Rute of the Silver River on Sunday, September 9, 2007 8:24 PM
Very nice, simple and elegent. Was there a bridge of some sort in the back corner?
"I'm as alive and awake as the dead without it" Patrick, Snoqualmie WA. Member of North West Railway Museum Caffinallics Anomus (Me)
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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, September 9, 2007 8:32 PM

 ondrek wrote:
 so the wife can sit and watch the train go around and a round, which is what she really wanted, she didnt want a lot of switches.

So was it signed in blood? Big Smile [:D]Evil [}:)]

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Posted by ondrek on Sunday, September 9, 2007 9:57 PM

I am hoping that its not TOO simple and that we get bored with it.

yes there is a bridge in the back corner off to the left of the pic.  its a 54" span that will have a covered bridge.

it was not signed in blood, but after maggie, my wife said that she didnt like all the switches, I also noticed that was not keeping to my original plan of keeping the switches close to the edge so they could be reached easily.  so I have changed the plan, for the 4th time. 

 

Kevin

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Posted by Ray Dunakin on Sunday, September 9, 2007 11:50 PM
Do you have any stills you can post to your website, for those of us with prehistoric computers and dialup?

 Visit www.raydunakin.com to see pics of the rugged and rocky In-ko-pah Railroad!
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Posted by ondrek on Monday, September 10, 2007 9:55 AM

 Ray Dunakin wrote:
Do you have any stills you can post to your website, for those of us with prehistoric computers and dialup?

I will work on getting a photo gallary up tonight.

Kevin

 

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Posted by ondrek on Tuesday, September 11, 2007 10:12 PM

Ok, so I finally got pics sized for web.


Please go to
http://www.flickr.com/photos/13421463@N08/sets/72157601982837457/show/

to view the pics, i needed the space back on my webspace

Kevin

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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, September 14, 2007 2:19 PM

 Kevin

 you finally getting some together , i hope it all will work out for you , i know it takes time and i'm adding a little here and a little their ,your never done . good luck with your rail road .   BEN

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Posted by ondrek on Friday, September 14, 2007 9:14 PM

thanks Ben,

yeah, finally starting.  its going to be slow now because i dont get to put much in each day.

Kevin 

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Posted by S&G Rute of the Silver River on Saturday, September 15, 2007 11:05 AM
Least you took care of the hard part in summer. Now for the expensive part all the stuff! You might want to pay in one lump sum, small unmaked bills, in.......
"I'm as alive and awake as the dead without it" Patrick, Snoqualmie WA. Member of North West Railway Museum Caffinallics Anomus (Me)
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Posted by ondrek on Saturday, September 15, 2007 9:08 PM

I did a bit of work on it today.  I have uploaded new pics on the flikr site.

I have the other stuff already.

my son has a bachmann big hauler with some cars passenger and freight.  my wife has a marklin maxi 2-6-0 that she likes, but she wants an aristo pacific with RC, sound, the works...I have a lionel 4-4-2 atlantic that I am slowly working on converting to manual control with battery.  my daughter doesnt have a train, but she doesnt seem to want one, i am thinking of getting her an eggliner ladybug.

I have two other engines stashed away that no one knows about.  I need to get the pacific this winter and then next fall my son can have his USA trains F3 santa fe with the 3 passenger cars.  i got a LGB amtrak 103 phase V for my son as well but it will be a while before he gets it as i need to have him learn humility first, i dont want a spoiled rotten kid.  he's only 7 this december.

we have been collecting for the last 5 years.  but we have no houses....thats the one area that will be hard to collect for, I will be building them myself i feel.

we'll see how it all goes.

Kevin 

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Posted by hudrail on Thursday, September 20, 2007 10:05 AM

Hi I am new to this gauge. Great start I am just clearing my site its by my 1" scale  Railroad which you can have a trip around at "brenthouse.co.uk". I see you are laying on ballast the same as I intend to but I am on London Clay which swells in winter and has cracks you could loose an arm in during the summer. I intend to lay railroad ties on top of each other 3 high and filling the void with crushed concrete. Then a pervious membrain then fine Granite ballast over it all. All plants will be in pots so as little soil as possible enters the top ballast layer. I have learnt in 20 years of 1" scale railroading that the wind blows and dumps soil on my ballast till it becomes loaded and grows great weeds. Then roundup is our weedkiller of choice ," no its not said the wife" . One trouble is that after 10 years trees carefully planted away from the track line grow into the track area and domestic harmony is broken. I have found it best to ask a friend to cut them down then leave for a couple of weeks. Flowers or wine on their return seems to work!

                Huddy     

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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, September 20, 2007 1:00 PM
 hudrail wrote:

 Then roundup is our weedkiller of choice ," no its not said the wife" .                 Huddy     

Being a landscaper there are other ways to kill them!

Vinegar makes a great weed killer. It has to be used properly to do the job but that's true of almost anything. And it is very safe - endorsed by organic gardeners & used by railway companies to kill vegetation along rail lines that would cover tracks.

Ordinary strength vinegar (5-6% acetic acid) is used. To a gallon of vinegar, one would add a 1/2 tsp of dish detergent to act as a surfactant so the vinegar would penetrate the soil well & move down the root. Put the vinegar into a large squeeze bottle (for a small job). For larger jobs, use a garden sprayer that will deliver a thin stream instead of a wide spray.

You need to trim off leaves of weeds that cover the root (like dandelions, plantain, & other low growing weeds) but if the leaves aren't in the way, don't worry. Just make sure you aim the vinegar stream down to the ground & just around the root. It will penetrate & the weed will die in a day or two. If you spray it around, the grass or other plants will die too. It's best not to use in a mixed bed where you don't want to harm other plants.

The vinegar kills the weeds by disrupting the normal pH around the root but is quickly washed out after a rain or if one waters the lawn well. After a rain or two, one can reseed the bare patches with no harm. Pets & children will not be harmed by using vinegar & likely would stay away from the spots 'cause of the vinegary smell. Railway companies use a MUCH stronger concentration - 20% solution but at that strength, it can be dangerous to handle so don't try looking for a stronger concentration.

One more important thing - do this on a SUNNY HOT day for best effects. If you try it during cool or wet weather, your results will be poor. It needs a few days of hot weather to do the best job.

Enjoy

Toad in da Swamp

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Posted by hudrail on Thursday, September 20, 2007 4:47 PM

 Humm we use salt and vinegar on our fish and chips over here. Thanks for the tip I will try it. My tip is to grease joints in track and any steel work with the grease used on car brake pads to stop squeeling .

                                 Huddy

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Posted by ondrek on Saturday, September 29, 2007 9:17 PM

Whoo Hoo!  the loop is now complete!

We ran trains today!

I have updated my flickr slide show to include the pics from today.

All i need to do now is get the mulch and a few trees.  I will work on the bridge latter this year, its going to be a covered bridge.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/13421463@N08/sets/72157601982837457/show/ 

Kevin 

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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, September 29, 2007 10:41 PM
Looking great!!!!!!! Thumbs Up [tup] Thumbs Up [tup]
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Posted by S&G Rute of the Silver River on Sunday, September 30, 2007 9:04 AM
Sign - Ditto [#ditto]
"I'm as alive and awake as the dead without it" Patrick, Snoqualmie WA. Member of North West Railway Museum Caffinallics Anomus (Me)

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