Jim Murray The San Juan Southern RR
"There are always alternatives, Captain" - Spock.
Ray Breyer
Modeling the NKP's Peoria Division, circa 1943
QUOTE: Originally posted by orsonroy I've successfully used white glue, wood glue, Liquid Nails and silicone caulk. I've UNsuccessfully used spray adhesive (three types) and carpet tape. I prefer using the caulk. A single tube goes a LONG way, it's workable for 1/2 hour or so, and works as a sound deadener (a plus on foam layouts, as mentioned above). Once the track's down, I hold it on place with push pins.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Javern i spred the caulk very thin to hold the track and then ballast as usual with scenic cement. There are several different colors of caulk out there from white, grey, black, etc. Get the latex based caulks and they are paintable with most any paint. Since I use a very thin layer of caulk the track can be taken up easily with out destroying the track or foam base.
QUOTE: Originally posted by ondrek how much sound dampen is achieved when the track is laid on the cork on the foam vs track right on the foam? which would be better? cork on foam or the woodland scenic foam track bed on the foam? I was going to use wood glue, but now the mention of the caulk is interesting....hmmm
QUOTE: Originally posted by ondrek Another question....any reason why the white bead board foam is worse than the blue of pink foam? I know its not as strong, but otherwise any reason not to use it? I have two 2'x8' sheets left over from a project that i was thinking of using for my layout.
QUOTE: Originally posted by orsonroy [The biggest issue I've seen with foam and noise amplification has come from two sources: support and adhesives used...
QUOTE: Originally posted by ondrek Ok, so i will go with the caulk, what brand are you using and how thick to you lay it down under the road bed?
QUOTE: [:0]woops, [:0]i was thinkning of using the bead board as my base, i figured that i could dig a river in it easier than the blue board. i dont plan on standing on it. I was going to make a wood frame around it and under the bead borad was going to be a sheet of 1/4" luan plywood. thats no good[?]
QUOTE: Originally posted by orsonroy [
QUOTE: Originally posted by ondrek Ok, so the silicone is ok, i have that already. someone in this thread said to use laytex, is there a difference?
QUOTE: I was going to put a frame around the foam because i have two small kids, and once they notice that the edge of the layout is soft and brakeable, it might start being worked on by them.....plus being in the house, the edge should be protected from the ocasional bump of the vacum hose as the floor is being cleaned.
QUOTE: So, I will lay down a spread of silicone caulk on the foam, lay the roadbed and then can the caulk be used to adhear the track to the roadbed? or should i ues those tiny track nails?
QUOTE: Originally posted by orsonroy Nails won't stick in foam at ALL. Use more caulk. In fact, I generally only use caulk for the track to roadbed glue joint, while using wood glue for all my other foam to foam gluing needs. I'll be trying caulk as a general adhesive once I get to the next terrain building session (sometime this winter, I hope!)
Modeling the Reading Railroad in the 1950's
Visit my web site at www.readingeastpenn.com for construction updates, DCC Info, and more.
QUOTE: Originally posted by ondrek Ok, one last newbie question.. when using the caulk on the roadbed to hold it down, while its still wet, could i sprinkle the balast on it? it would stick, so my thought is yes, but want to ask...I will test out on a small 2" section tonight.
QUOTE: This is great advise, I really appriciate your help. Kevin
QUOTE: Originally posted by rrinker I was under the impression that silicone-based caulk would cause problems with future scenic layers like the ballast adhering, or cause interactions with other materials like the plastic of the track ties. For this reason I am sticking to latex-only caulk (some is a blend). Plus, the pure latex stuff is usually the cheapest.
Originally posted by orsonroy [t's worth looking into, but I highly doubt it. I've never tried it, since ballasting is the dead-last thing I do to a section of layout before it's done. I have tried all sorts of "miracle" track laying techniques and adhesives, and none really allow you to lay the track and ballast at the same time with any sort of success. quote] I am going to try it over the weekend. and see what happens. i have stuff i can try this out on. Reply Anonymous Member sinceApril 2003 305,205 posts Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, September 25, 2004 12:56 AM ondrek ; staying away from the beaded type of foam is recommended. Unless your not going to shape it or put pressure on it. When you carve it , you'll see why. If your not carving it ,and it 's in an area of scenery that's not being accessed, go for it. As mentioned before,it's weaker, crumbles , and doesn't hold up as well when force is applied ,compared to the extruded types. Something to consider, as you mentioned the kids might get adventuresome. Reply Edit ondrek Member sinceFebruary 2004 From: Vermont 540 posts Posted by ondrek on Saturday, September 25, 2004 7:04 AM QUOTE: Originally posted by rororo ondrek ; staying away from the beaded type of foam is recommended. Unless your not going to shape it or put pressure on it. When you carve it , you'll see why. If your not carving it ,and it 's in an area of scenery that's not being accessed, go for it. As mentioned before,it's weaker, crumbles , and doesn't hold up as well when force is applied ,compared to the extruded types. Something to consider, as you mentioned the kids might get adventuresome. Good point. I will be thinking it over once i start laying track. I am still not at that point yet. Kevin Reply Anonymous Member sinceApril 2003 305,205 posts Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, September 25, 2004 8:28 AM To each there own. I have been using the white bead foam ( 2" ) for a long time as a base over bench work. No plywood first. I haven't had any failures and I use hot glue to hold down the track. If its to hot it will melt the foam though so you do have to keep the temp down a tad, and I don't plan on walking on the layout. As far as noise I haven't found it to be any more noisy than any other base product. Now my layout has also been built in modules so if need be I can move it very easily if the need arrises. Reply Edit Anonymous Member sinceApril 2003 305,205 posts Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, September 25, 2004 1:29 PM In the town where I live you can only get the beaded foam. I have it on my layout over 1/2 inch plywood glud down with liquid nail and have not had any problems with it. Reply Edit robengland Member sinceFebruary 2003 From: New Zealand 462 posts Posted by robengland on Sunday, September 26, 2004 8:30 PM dark brown silicone caulk for me, on top of cork. My 2" blue foam is not supported by anything and it seems pretty quiet to me, though next time I think I will put a plywood base in too. The cork holds track nails OK - I use them while the caulk is drying, or I use map pins (easier to find again afterwards - I try not to leave pins in as they WILL transmit sound) Rob Proud owner of the a website sharing my model railroading experiences, ideas and resources. Reply Anonymous Member sinceApril 2003 305,205 posts Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, December 14, 2004 10:00 PM Hmmm, I was all set to use the WS foam roadbed instead of cork. But the guy at the hobby shop who builds the in-store layouts said he had used it and hated it. And would never use it again. He said it was so soft that the ballast started cracking loose. Reply Edit rrinker Member sinceFebruary 2002 From: Reading, PA 30,002 posts Posted by rrinker on Wednesday, December 15, 2004 8:45 AM Interesting, the guy at MY local hobby shop uses WS foam and uses it. I built a test section with it so far and I like it. All my previous layouts used cork. I haven't ballasted my test section yet, but I don't see the ballast cracking off unless a coupleof things happen. One, it wasn't wetted down enough with 'wet' water (water with a drop of detergent, or alcohol), so the glue just sat on the top and made a shell with loose ballast underneath, or two, people keep poking at it. --Randy Modeling the Reading Railroad in the 1950's Visit my web site at www.readingeastpenn.com for construction updates, DCC Info, and more. Reply Anonymous Member sinceApril 2003 305,205 posts Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, December 16, 2004 9:32 AM I have been using track over WS trackfoam for over 14 months and have had no problems with loose ballast. It was sprayed with matte medium mixed 1/5 with water. in older areas i used cork and cannot tell any difference in noise levels. Reply Edit ondrek Member sinceFebruary 2004 From: Vermont 540 posts Posted by ondrek on Thursday, December 16, 2004 2:14 PM I have built a practice layout using the blue foam board as the base, i then mixed the WS foam roadbed with Cork. I have not yet tried to baslast it yet. I do have track down and I DO hear a difference when the trains run. there is much more resinated noise when the engine is on the cork than when its on the WS roadbed. I have my own baslast process that i am testing out...i am using the silicone caulk that i used to secure the roadbed to the foam(works great by the way) to secure the track to the roadbed. And while the caulk is still wet, i will be balasting right to the caulk. I have done a few tests and it does work, the draw back is that if you take your finger and slide it along the balast, it comes right off like the sand on wet sandpaper. so my plan is to press the balast into the caulk on my next test strip wich will be done tonight. I can see how if the track and roadbed was pressed on, the balast might crack since white glue is pretty stiff when its dry. if i use the caulk, it should flex when or if the track and roadbed are pressed, so it shouldnt crack or chip. one thing to ask is why was the balast pressed on after it was dry anyhow? or did it just crack on its own? did the glue cause the crack? did it get cold from transporting it outside and the glue cracked from shrinking? does it shrink on its own over time? hrmmm....[V] kevin Reply Subscriber & Member Login Login, or register today to interact in our online community, comment on articles, receive our newsletter, manage your account online and more! Login Register Users Online There are no community member online Search the Community ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT Model Railroader Newsletter See all Sign up for our FREE e-newsletter and get model railroad news in your inbox! Sign up
QUOTE: Originally posted by rororo ondrek ; staying away from the beaded type of foam is recommended. Unless your not going to shape it or put pressure on it. When you carve it , you'll see why. If your not carving it ,and it 's in an area of scenery that's not being accessed, go for it. As mentioned before,it's weaker, crumbles , and doesn't hold up as well when force is applied ,compared to the extruded types. Something to consider, as you mentioned the kids might get adventuresome.