selector wrote: claycts wrote: ... The tracks are to close for a SLOPE and have a rock wall is fiine but no place for a tunnel portal. If the darn thing was not so bullet proof as far as operations we would yank it out! Don't use a portal...just make a blasted rock entrance. Many roads had such natural portals if the rock was hard and stable.Something like this:
claycts wrote: ... The tracks are to close for a SLOPE and have a rock wall is fiine but no place for a tunnel portal. If the darn thing was not so bullet proof as far as operations we would yank it out!
... The tracks are to close for a SLOPE and have a rock wall is fiine but no place for a tunnel portal. If the darn thing was not so bullet proof as far as operations we would yank it out!
Don't use a portal...just make a blasted rock entrance. Many roads had such natural portals if the rock was hard and stable.
Something like this:
That is what I like about this forum ask and you shal receive. Thank You. All I have to do now is pry myself out of my race car to work on trains.
3 questions to ask yourself. does it run well? do you enjoy operating it? do you mind the time to maintain it? if the answers to those 3 questions are yes then you got a good thing going diferrent factors weigh in for different people though. i'm planning on embarking on a 14x35 double deck with 2 helixes myself. looking forward to the challenge. a big factor in my planning is easy accessability to any hidden trackage.
claycts, looks like good work, i'd keep it and find a way to make it scenickly work.
With a rather complex multi-level double-garage-filler under construction, I would seem to be in the same leaky canoe - except:
This is not a lucky accident. It's the result of fifty-plus years of lessons learned in the design and construction of other layouts.
Chuck (modeling Central Japan in September, 1964)
Still though....there has to be something fine and satisfying when beating the odds and coming up with a complex, interesting, and eminently useful/reliable layout. I think our memories let us down occasionally, and sure we make the odd goof in thinking things through, but most of us do pretty darned will at wiring and routing to get the results we need.
I think that benchwork is often the key...it can make or break even a simple layout. In my case, it is very simply an open frame concept with goop overlayed on aluminum screening or disposable cloth. It runs between splines supported by risers on simple joists. The beauty is that all my wiring is therefore easily visible, traced, and accessed because every feeder is routed up through tiny holes in the splines right to the very rails they service.
On the other hand, you mention tunnels and such...I have have most of my troubles in one tunnel...buckling of the tracks...which necessitated my removing the paneling/fascia to get at the area. No big deal, but wouldn'cha know it?
I also have that problem STILL. A picture is worth a 1000 words! THis is an old picture of the no-lix and mine area. This was taken 8 months ago and we still have no come up with a good looking method for scenery. The tracks are to close for a SLOPE and have a rock wall is fiine but no place for a tunnel portal. If the darn thing was not so bullet proof as far as operations we would yank it out! THe answeer would have been to just use a normal transtion since it would have been only a 2.2% grade to the leve the "yell Caboose is on and THEN we could have run at 2% up to the mine using the track the caboose is on now.
This is a good thread for anybody thinking of building a complicated railroad. I am at 1200 sq feet with 700 foot main line and scraped all plans to build phase 2 and 3.
Yep, the old adage by Albert Einstein is still true:
"Everything should be as simple as possible, and no simpler."
Thanks for sharing your lessons, mobilman.
Tom
https://tstage9.wixsite.com/nyc-modeling
Time...It marches on...without ever turning around to see if anyone is even keeping in step.
Hi,
Those of you building a layout or redoing an existing one may want to learn from my mistake.
My existing layout was built in the early '90s. It is HO, 11x15 in a spare room, and effectively has three levels. The construction is pretty good, as I am almost a perfectionist in that area (carpentry, wiring, tracklaying).
Well, in the last few years I realized I got too cute with my design, and stuff like hidden turnouts and reverse loops in hidden staging areas were not such a good idea. And having all those turnouts powered and the plethora of blocks made me "relearn" the layout if I stayed away from it for more than a couple of weeks.
Last summer I replaced all the switch machines (within easy reach) with Caboose Hobbies ground throws. This turned out to be a terrific move, with one of the benefits being to greatly simplify the controls for the remaining powered turnouts.
The second part of the layout "makeover" was to reduce the number of blocks, and to move some industrial sidings to better accomodate structures. Well, this was not the easiest job in town but in a couple of weeks I had it finished (or so I thought) and with two new control panels the layout is much easier to operate.
However (isn't there always a "however"), in reviewing the finished redo, I found that I have two block controls that power wires that lead to "points unknown". Yup, these two wires lead to an area sandwiched in benchwork, screening, plaster, and just disappears. Yes, I have done my testing of trackage and just cannot find where these two wires end up. And then I realized that it is possible that they were never connected in the first place! Anyway, I will disconnect them and put them out of the way until such time as the layout is dismantled, and their secrets will be revealed!!!
My point is, getting "cute" or complicated or overdoing the building of your layout can often come back to bite you. I've certainly done some things on this one that "worked like a charm", but I've done other things that have truly bit me in the backside!
ENJOY,
Mobilman44
ENJOY !
Living in southeast Texas, formerly modeling the "postwar" Santa Fe and Illinois Central