jktrains wrote: Mike,You need to check out my benchwork book someday. It has a chapter on gates and lift sections.jktrains
Mike,
You need to check out my benchwork book someday. It has a chapter on gates and lift sections.
jktrains
alco's forever!!!!! Majoring in HO scale Minorig in O scale:)
rs2mike wrote:I am planning a whole room layout. i am thinking of a lift up bridge or lift out bridge to span the door to my workshop.. Problem is that i do not how to design one. if you could post plans and or pics of your lift up or out section i would appreciate it.mike
From the far, far reaches of the wild, wild west I am: rtpoteet
I''ve a lift up bridge. More at my room-site.
I've built it as part of the track and cut the roadbed later. Why? It is at grade to the right, different grad.
Wolfgang
Pueblo & Salt Lake RR
Come to us http://www.westportterminal.de my videos my blog
Hudson asked: what scale? It's N scale.
Here is an earlier photo with legless benchwork sections on garage floor. I found that if I made the entire length I want to open all in one moveable causeway section, the section will be too big to move anywhere out of the way. I reduced the planned length of the causeway and added a 20" long "land" section I guess I could call the hanging section or suspended section. (The causeway section will need to be all one piece because it will have poured water simulation and I can't have a break.) The hanging section will have no legs, will be supported between the rollaway causeway section which has legs and rollers, and a fixed nonmoving rest of the layout.
I mocked up the appearance of the land end of the causeway with an amusement district neighborhood, using a few buildings I plan to use, some IHC Victorians I got cheap and builtup which i plan to unbuild and rebuild, and some boxes and mockup cutouts. Roller coaster mockup in the back corner, and half-built nightclub pleasure pier alongside the causeway. Going very slow with schoolwork and evicted in-law camped out in the trainroom.
The prototype:
leighant wrote: I am modeling a masonry causeway to an island seaport that is well over a mile long. My selective compression is on a 7 foot section that I hope I will be able to duck under for access during operational setup, and roll out of the way for more normal room access.Plan:Uncompleted causeway section:
I am modeling a masonry causeway to an island seaport that is well over a mile long. My selective compression is on a 7 foot section that I hope I will be able to duck under for access during operational setup, and roll out of the way for more normal room access.
Plan:
Uncompleted causeway section:
thanks
thanks for the great info. This will be very useful when it comes time to build that section of the layout.
mike
The yellow rectangles shown are hinged, swing down boards on which my wiring connectors are mounted.
Track power on the gate is connected to the track in the usual way, and connected to the power bus via a loop of wire that hangs near the hinges. The loop is loose enough that it is not stressed or flexed much by the movement of the gate.
The gate opens about 130 degrees into the interior. It's movement is only constrained by physical obstructions. It is longer than the benchwork on which it hangs.
When open, it hangs only on the hinges. When closed both ends are supported by 2x4s on the fixed benchwork. It is very solid when closed and latched.
Dave
Lackawanna Route of the Phoebe Snow
Phoebe Vet wrote: I have a 4 foot swing gate on my around the garage layout. Because of the size, It uses 2 door hinges.I took these during the construction of it:The light colored track that runs around the front edge of the layout is a subway which is actually below ground but open to the front.
I have a 4 foot swing gate on my around the garage layout. Because of the size, It uses 2 door hinges.
I took these during the construction of it:
The light colored track that runs around the front edge of the layout is a subway which is actually below ground but open to the front.
Phoebe Vet wrote: http://www.trains.com/mrr/default.aspx?c=a&id=1100
http://www.trains.com/mrr/default.aspx?c=a&id=1100
I knew that I had that article, thanks for the post. I studied that thing for days, now I'm in need of one. Who would have known.
Johnnny_reb Once a word is spoken it can not be unspoken!
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I am planning a whole room layout. i am thinking of a lift up bridge or lift out bridge to span the door to my workshop.. Problem is that i do not how to design one. if you could post plans and or pics of your lift up or out section i would appreciate it.