Getting ready to build my first N-scale layout. Part of the track plan will go into an area under basement stars, which has a finished access door only 39" high. Two mainlines will enter this area and loop around back out, one ascending while the other decends grade. This will limit the overall height of my benchwork. I want to drop part of the benchwork down a bit before it enters this stairway to allow for a more dramatic river canyon crossing into mountains that hide the access opening. Any good tips on how to build drop-down benchwork that will be secure but give me the desired canyon depth I am seeking? Tnx.
I would need to see the problem, then perhaps I could offer help
Hi tmatzell:
Welcome to the forums!!
What type of benchwork are you building. i.e. 'L' girder, open grid, shelf? Is there anything the benchwork can/will be attached to, i.e. walls or the stair risers?
Dave
I'm just a dude with a bad back having a lot of fun with model trains, and finally building a layout!
If you have built L girder benchwork:
Assuming you have built box frame benchwork:
My own deep canyon drops to knee level, but I cheated. It's an inside corner between a shelf and a peninsula., so most of the drop overhangs the structure of the main benchwork. The canyon floor slopes enough to hide wall-hugging track a few inches below the visible bridge. The prototype exists in the wilds of Western Tokyo-To (which is a provence, not just a city) and the real canyon floor is almost that steep.
Chuck (Modeling Central Japan in September, 1964)
Alan
Freelancing the LK&O Railroad
Perfect!! thank you.
Alan's got an outstanding example there. Here's a few pics of how I di my much more compact gulch crossing. The pics pretty much tell the story, but ask if anything isn't clear.
Mike Lehman
Urbana, IL
Excellent ideas here.
Henry
COB Potomac & Northern
Shenandoah Valley