Hi Jim
PB&J RR I have no idea why this is difficult for me.
Long time ago you started with a U-shaped plan; it became an L-shaped plan and now even a rectangular. All the time you were asked to make a drawing of your room. In the mean time we know what your wife is doing to make some money. We know that the CEO is dreaming about a new house and a big layout.
Why is it so difficult for an otherwise so intelligent man to do what is needed in the first place?
Negotiate with your spouse the space you can use, make a drawing and stick to it. Or stay in your armchair and amuse us with a new design from time to time. Keep on dreaming about a GM or Honda plant, or start working on a "small" car-trans-loading facility.
Stein can bombard you with as many ideas as you want; but knowing what you want in terms of the railroad you envision is point two you have to be very clear about; in the first place for your self.
IMHO not analysis paralysis is the big disease, but not willing to except the fact that a small and simple pike can be beautiful as well. John Allen's first Gorre and Daphetid or Lance Mindheim's East Rail are prime examples. And both can be incorporated, one actually was, in a new and larger layout.
Have fun drawing your space and writing down your druthers,
Paul
Aw, shucks, Stein - no need to be so humble. You have given me and others in this forum so much valuable advice and input, eloquently, a little persistent sometimes, but always with patience and a smile. You have, and I am unfortunately lacking this ability, the gift to see car movements on a paper track plan.
It is people like you who make this forum alive and a pleasure to visit!
Honor to those who deserve it!
Sir Madog with Paul and Stein you have two of the most apt people and experts in layout design interested in your issue.
Nice of you to keep saying so, Ulrich, but I am most definitely not an "expert in layout design". I'm just an average, or possibly below average, model railroader who have an interest in discussing layout design and track planning.
Smile, Stein
Jim,
with Paul and Stein you have two of the most apt people and experts in layout design interested in your issue. Listening carefully to what the two can tell you will be of a big help to you developing an interesting and rewarding layout.
I had both of them helping me in my quest for a layout design and it was a pleasure to work with them!
You got me thinking again, and I've got "See the room!" ringing in my ears, I spent a good chunk of last night reading Byron Henderson and making real sense. I keep trying to build more into the available flat surface than I should. I made a template in RTS the size of my room and I was actually working on T an U shaped Templates when I logged in here.... I've had several "Ah Hw!" moments in the last day, its going to take a significant amount of coffee to sort it all out... I'm ordinarily a very intelligent person, I have no idea why this is difficult for me.
Thanks,
Jim
PB&J RRStein, you're correct clearance for wide bodied modeler's is something I often neglect... Go figure... I am a wide bodied modeler... LOL... What I was trying to do was use the tabled I have on hand as a platform for the layout- I have three of these 29.5x60 tables, and we know that we won't be living in this house forever, so I don't want to build a permanent layout-shelves, L girder, domino... What I plan to do is brace between the side frame of these tables and clamp or drill and bolt them together in whatever configurattion I finally decide on and then build with breakaway sections at the joints so that I can break it down for moving, or separate and expand.I'm working it... So many unknowns at this point... Grr...
Making a layout on three sections that each are 29.5 x 60" (ie 2.5 x 5 feet), and with a footprint that can fit into a standard room of e.g. 10x12 feet isn't all that hard.
You could always just make a T shaped layout, with room for aisles on both sides of the short leg. Maybe something like this:
Not at all a complete plan - I have just sketched in some possible locations for scenes. It would fit into a generic 10x10 room with minimum 30" aisles and reach no where more than 30". Curve radius in the drawing above is 13".
Problem with this way of combining your tables is that it uses more floor space. That peninsula will take up quite a bit of the center of the room.
Design is always about trade-offs. You get separate scenes and better access, you lose floor space.
You could use an L shape into the corner, too. Uses less floor space, but at the expense of having tracks less accessible, and making it harder to create visually separate scenes.
Or at least consider the option of putting those three 5-foot tables into an U-shape and make some transition sections in between them - or something.
But first - see the room.
Craig the layout will be mostly steam mostly, though I do have an F unit and an E8 that I use to pull some short passenger cars on occasion when I run my current layout which is built on a 29.5x60 inch folding table... The 11 inch radius curves are not a problem for any of my locos or cars that I run. I've planned in #6 turnouts on the mainline and will use them also in the engine facility at the bottom on the layout. in the coal mine area at the top, I will use #4's.
This is a completely freelance project, though I do have a soft spot for the Big Four/ NYC and DT&I.
Stein, you're correct clearance for wide bodied modeler's is something I often neglect... Go figure... I am a wide bodied modeler... LOL... What I was trying to do was use the tabled I have on hand as a platform for the layout- I have three of these 29.5x60 tables, and we know that we won't be living in this house forever, so I don't want to build a permanent layout-shelves, L girder, domino... What I plan to do is brace between the side frame of these tables and clamp or drill and bolt them together in whatever configurattion I finally decide on and then build with breakaway sections at the joints so that I can break it down for moving, or separate and expand.I'm working it... So many unknowns at this point... Grr...
Thanks for your input and interest.
The thing you seem to have a problem with in your plans is allowing for operator space and reach.
I'd suggest starting with a drawing of the room your layout will be in, showing doors and windows, other uses of the room etc.
That will allow you to figure out where you will have room for aisles (preferably minimum 30" wide), and how to have less than than (preferably) 24" reach from an aisle to any point on your layout.
Craig North Carolina
Just for the sake of academics... I doodled this up figuratively speaking of course... Am I learning anything or just getting worse.. I've been reading Linn Wescott and John Allen, and that Armstrong guy and I'm in aww of what they accomplished.. I just seem to make a mess.. But I think I'm learning...
This probably isn't a candidate for my space, but it was kind of fun to work up.
Tex, Paul, et al:
thank you for your excellent suggestions... when I haver time today I'll look at your plan in my space, or modify my own plan according to your suggestions to see what I can come up with... I appreciate the assistance...
PB&J RRAnyhow, I've come up with a modest plan in replacement, which I think will satify mywants, needs, givens, and druthers pretty well, knowing from the outset that no plan is perfect, and all battle plans change... I want a railroad that will allow continuous running, some staging and operations, and some scenic opportunities without being overly difficult to build.
Umm - 10x6 feet. We still don't know how that room that the layout will need to fit into looks, but a HOG (donut) style layout (either on free standing benches or wall shelves or a combination thereof) might be a good idea to maximize railroading in a space that size. Needs a liftout or duckunder or some such thing, but maximizes real estate usable for tracks and railroad served businesses, maximize reach, and needs only one aisle - the central operator's pit.
hi,
I had drawn the previous plan with rather big radii (15 and up); I've made a redraw with 12.5 / 13.75 radii. Even to my surprise it fitted in a 10 x 6 space. Some minor changes were made; most had to do with keeping some space for the river. However the staging tracks are still hard to reach.
After I've drawn the main line and decided where staging and where the station had to be laid out I started thinking about scenery. To separate the station and the staging tracks I chose for the river/mill scene. The engine service/ interchange scene was nicked from the Railroad in the Alcove design by Byron Henderson. Even before going back to the railroad for adding sidings and spurs I drew in the roads. Beside being great scenes, they are great scenic deviders too.
With the usual latuitude I am given for projects, I'm told by the planning and development that we have to share space, with consideration to the recession and that the quilt production facility cannot be rezoned to fit my needs.. so instead of 10x 12 I have 6x10 So I retooled my original a bit... I'm thinking of doing a 1/12 mock up on a piece of foam board to make sure my buildings and things will fit, eyeballing it isn't going to work. I need to get some problem solving happening and stop pining for the space I want and use what I have... Otherwise my trains will remain boxed for another 20 years.
Paul,
I like your idea... If I can make the space available, I'll name an industry after you- Jas Motorwerks, or Dutch Boy Paints, or Paulus Sofa King-Comfortable! Anyhow that plan looks like fun to play with...
Later,
hi
Just my idea for your old space.
On the inner track you can switch if you like, or let them roll on both tracks. And a short single track passage over the bridge, just to keep the engeneers awake.
A large mill and lots of trees are keeping the staging tracks less visible.
Have fun
BTW Atlas RTS, main with #7 or #10's and a min mainline radius of 15".
It looks like you're trying to cram a lot of track into that space. It looks like most of your sidings only have a few inches between them at most- hard to fit an industrial building into that space. The similar lack of scenery space may or may not be an issue for you.
Do you have room for buildings and industries? would be a concern looking at the track plan. Heavy on track with minimal room for scenery and structures.
Thinking and rethinking is always the process that gets me into trouble but over the winter, since its been too cold for me to get into the garage to work on the railroad, I've given thought to both the space and the plan... My prior plan was a gradually evolving mess, that I'd gotten started on just prior to working enough mandatory overtime at my job that the prospect of working on my railroad seemed more like a throat than a time of enjoyment... Luckily that situation has changed...
Anyhow, I've come up with a modest plan in replacement, which I think will satify mywants, needs, givens, and druthers pretty well, knowing from the outset that no plan is perfect, and all battle plans change... I want a railroad that will allow continuous running, some staging and operations, and some scenic opportunities without being overly difficult to build...