QUOTE: Originally posted by cuyama The classic design of this type was the John Armstrong layout combining On3 and HO in one basement. This featured D&RGW and UP and was in "18 Tailor-made Model Railroad Track Plans" (Kalmbach 1983). John's advice was to arrange things so that at any point an observer could only see the tracks of one or the other. The space efficiency comes from overlapping hidden trackage (like turnbacks or staging) so that the footprint is reduced. Regards, Byron
I tried to sell my two cents worth, but no one would give me a plug nickel for it.
I don't have a leg to stand on.
QUOTE: Originally posted by hammondandmia My son-in-law and I are building a new basement layout. We are trying to incorporate both HO and N gauge into the layout without too much of a distraction between the two. Any ideas?[8D]
Layout Design GalleryLayout Design Special Interest Group
QUOTE: Originally posted by vsmith You can also choose to model N track as narrow gauge. N track is often used for HOn30 for HO scale trains running on 30" narrow guage trains. That way there is no scale descrepency.
ML
Have fun with your trains