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Compound ladder for staging yard question

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  • Member since
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  • From: Southern Florida Gulf Coast
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Posted by SeeYou190 on Thursday, December 13, 2018 7:26 AM

I built a mock-up of my planned compound turnout yard throat on the living room floor and tested all my locomotives/trains through it, and they all worked perfectly. I used Kato #6 turnouts and track pieces, which will be what is used on the actual layout.

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I would suggest you do the same with the track pieces you plan to use.

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One experiment is worth a thousand theories.

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.

-Kevin

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Living the dream.

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Posted by NeO6874 on Wednesday, December 12, 2018 12:06 PM

railandsail
[...]and it takes a little more thought as to what number track you are entering.

 

Not after you've wired things.

I can't edit the pic right now, so we'll have to use words (sorry)

Trackwise, you've got 

1. Mainline (all turnouts straight)

2. Yard_1

3. Yard_2

4. Yard_3

5. Yard_4

6. Yard_5

 

Turnout-wise, you have

  • TO 1 (mainline, leftmost)
  • TO 2 (mainline, center)
  • TO 3 (mainline, rightmost)
  • TO 4 (div. TO1)
  • TO 5 (div. TO4)

 

So, your logic table will be

XXXX| TO1 | TO2 | TO3 | TO4| TO5

MAIN|MAIN|MAIN|MAIN|ANY |ANY

YRD1|MAIN|MAIN|DIV  |ANY |ANY

YRD2|MAIN|DIV  |ANY  |ANY |ANY

YRD3|DIV   |ANY |ANY  |MAIN|ANY

YRD4|DIV   |ANY |ANY  |DIV   |DIV

YRD5|DIV   |ANY |ANY  |DIV   |MAIN

-Dan

Builder of Bowser steam! Railimages Site

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Posted by Espeefan on Wednesday, December 12, 2018 11:55 AM

railandsail

Pinwheel Preference

There is actually a reason I believe I prefer the pinwheel arrangement. Tell me if my reasoning is incorrect.

 

If I power all of the turnouts with switch motors they could all be located on the front curving edge of the staging deck plywood,...within relatively easy reach for servicing/replacement. Or they might even be manually controlled from the front edge of that staging deck??

This was my original track plan for the ladder. I was going to have all the switch machines (Peco's) lined up along the rear edge of that supporting plywood deck (not shown so close to the edge in this dwg), and be able to access them from that 'hollow triangular space' between the staging deck and the shed's corner.

 

If I now place the ladder turnouts out on the front edge, I will have even easier access.

 

 

Brian, I guess you were typing two responses, while I was busy drawing and replying to your original question, but no worries! 

You are correct.  A standard ladder would have all of your turnouts located along the edge of your layout, which could be helpful in certain situations.  On the prototype railroad, where safety is important, a compound ladder would require the brakeman to cross a lot of tracks to throw some turnouts.  I'm sure that is why the compound ladder is not often used.  

For modeling purposes, especially for a staging yard (that is probably out of view), the compound ladder has an advantage.  More consistant lenths of track.  A standard ladder gives up a lot of length with each consecutive turnout added.  I orginally had a staging yard designed with a standard ladder.  My shortest track was a touch over 18' and my longest was 29'.  That's with a 5 track staging yard.  With a compound ladder, I was able to squeeze in one additional storage track, for a total of 6, and the shortest track became 18', and the longest stretched to 22'.  Well worth having a compound ladder, in my opinion. 

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Posted by Espeefan on Wednesday, December 12, 2018 11:40 AM

Hello Brian,

I'm not a geometry or track planning expert, but I'll do my best to try and answer your question.

The short answer is I can build a yard ladder at any angle I choose, and I can also control the center to center track spacing by trimming, or lengthening, the rails of my turnout's diverging route.

The more in depth explaination goes something like this.  All commerically available turnouts have what I would call 'fixed geometry' out of the box.  The angle of the diverging route is whatever the manufacturer makes it.  The rail length of any turnout's diverging route is also determined by the manufacturer.  These two things affect the track center to center spacing.  You have the option to trim the diverging route rails shorter, or you can add a piece of track to lengthen them.  If you do neither, and you simply go to town laying track, your track center spacing in a yard ladder is going to end up at some fixed dimension.  To better illustrate what I mean, I drew up some yard ladders.

Here you can see my original compound ladder at the top.  Notice I have some short pieces of track between some of the turnouts to space the diverging routes further away from each other.  2.5" on center to be exact.

In the second ladder design, I simply connected all the turnouts to each other with no care or worries of what my track spacing would become.  The result is a 2" center to center spacing.

The third ladder design is my original arrangement, but now letting the yard track simply be a straight tangent.  I still have my 2.5" center to center spacing, only because I have some additional (short) pieces of track in between turnouts.  They are about 3". 

Here is another photo of my original compound yard ladder, built at a 20 degree angle.  I simply rotated it 20 degrees, but it could be clocked to any position you like and the 2.5" center to center track spacing remains the same.

I hope this answers your question!  If not, just let me know, and I'll try to do a better job of explaining things.

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Posted by railandsail on Wednesday, December 12, 2018 11:12 AM

Pinwheel Preference

There is actually a reason I believe I prefer the pinwheel arrangement. Tell me if my reasoning is incorrect.

 

If I power all of the turnouts with switch motors they could all be located on the front curving edge of the staging deck plywood,...within relatively easy reach for servicing/replacement. Or they might even be manually controlled from the front edge of that staging deck??

This was my original track plan for the ladder. I was going to have all the switch machines (Peco's) lined up along the rear edge of that supporting plywood deck (not shown so close to the edge in this dwg), and be able to access them from that 'hollow triangular space' between the staging deck and the shed's corner.

 

If I now place the ladder turnouts out on the front edge, I will have even easier access.

  • Member since
    February 2009
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Posted by railandsail on Wednesday, December 12, 2018 11:07 AM

 Would that compound ladder example sited as #2 above still hold up with its track spacing down the side, if the horizontal feed line was slanted down at something like 20 degrees??

Brian

 

Rotated 25 degrees
(oops, looks like more due to distortion of photo size)

I think this answers that one question I had.

 

 

 

 

I'm not as enamored with this 'compound' arrangement as much as the 'pinwheel' one. The switches are not all lined up along the edge, and it takes a little more thought as to what number track you are entering.

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Posted by railandsail on Wednesday, December 12, 2018 9:34 AM

Espeefan,

Geometry question
If you angled that horizontal feed line down at something like 20 degrees would it affect your track spacing running down the side?
(sorry I used to be great at geometry, but the old mind is not quite working as good as it use to).

This is something like what I had been considering,..using all Peco 'mediums' ...

 

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Posted by railandsail on Friday, December 7, 2018 7:26 AM

Espeefan

Hello guys,

Just looking for some input on a design I drew up for a compound yard ladder.  I am working on designing a double deck layout, with one level dedicated completely to a staging yard.  My original plan used a standard ladder track arrangement, but after I decided to increase the center to center track distance to 2.5", I thought I'd give the compound ladder a try, to better maximize the length of all the tracks, and keep them more consistant.  My concern is the 's' curve that is naturally created where the right hand turnout is joined to the left hand turnout, after a short tangent of track.  All turnouts in my plan are #6s.  The 3.63" long straight between the right and left hand turnouts should ease the effect of the 's' curve, but will it be enough?  I hope to run all the usual modern day equipment, but is that possible?  I thought of using #8 turnouts in place of the two #6s, which cause the 's' curve, but when I layed them over the plan, I noticed I did not gain anything.  Probably due to me keeping the same center to center track distance, which requires a 3.63" long straight between the #6 turnouts.  With #8s, I need no extra track to maintain the spacing.

http://s4.photobucket.com/user/Espeefan/media/Compound%20ladder_zpstvbsccvq.jpg.html

 

 

Your posted dwg of the compound ladder has me looking to review my staging ladder before I soon start to lay the track.
http://cs.trains.com/mrr/f/11/t/269136.aspx?page=5

(sorry there is no way to link a specfic posting)

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Posted by riogrande5761 on Monday, December 3, 2018 10:51 AM

commodious = longer turnouts?  Cowboy

Rio Grande.  The Action Road  - Focus 1977-1983

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Posted by mlehman on Sunday, December 2, 2018 6:29 PM

Speed is a factor in how far you push things with S-curves, which is one reason you can get away things in yards that would be an issue on the main. Still, do your best to maximize the spacing between turnouts and you'll minimize the chances for problems.

Another trick is to use more commodious trackage to serve tracks, like at the pig ramp, where long cars will be the norm and tighten up for other tracks, which are likely to see no more than an occassional long car mixed in with other shorter ones. It's the two or more long cars in a row that really get you, so where there's mixed freight and thus mostly shorter cars, tighter turnout spacing and the potential for S-curves turns out to be less of an issue that sometimes thought.

Mike Lehman

Urbana, IL

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Posted by Espeefan on Sunday, December 2, 2018 1:19 PM

Thank you for the replies, guys!  I appreciate them.  I didn't stop to think about the obvious - that any turnout creates a natural 's' curve.  I guess I was just thinking too deeply at the moment I began to nit-pick my track plan.  After reading your comments, I agree that this compound ladder should be fine.  Worst case scenario, I can simply avoid running the trains that have extra long rolling stock or motive power into that track in question.  Personally, I think it will be fine.  Once I get to building my turnouts (Fast Tracks), I can try some mock up testing. 

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Posted by riogrande5761 on Sunday, December 2, 2018 10:18 AM

hon30critter

Hi Espeefan,

I don't think your 'S' curves are anything to worry about. They are no different than what your trains would run through when entering a passing siding or going through a crossover. My 2 Cents

Dave

Or a yard related S curve.  Standard yard ladders typically have S-curves and they are part of the geometry.  Usually it is difficult to avoid S cuvevs in yard ladders so don't fret about it.  Naturally it is good to avoid them as much a you can, but I don't see any particular problems with the ladder you depicted.

You show a 16 inch straight section before the curve which is good.  IIRC, John Armstrong recommended a straight section where possible of the distance of you longest car.  As a rule of thumb, I try to put in at least 12 inches where possible.

Rio Grande.  The Action Road  - Focus 1977-1983

PED
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Posted by PED on Sunday, December 2, 2018 8:28 AM

I doubt it will be a problem but if you are concerned, build a test track using the combination of track you plan to use then do the following...

1) Use two 6 axle loco's to pull a string of 89' cars (with talago couplers) thru the track......then....

2) Back that same combo thru the track.

3) Repeat 1 & 2 using body mount couplers.

If you plan to use low flange wheels, be sure to use them in this test. If all that works OK, you should have no problem with that track arrangement.

Paul D

N scale Washita and Santa Fe Railroad
Southern Oklahoma circa late 70's

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Posted by hon30critter on Sunday, December 2, 2018 2:01 AM

Hi Espeefan,

I don't think your 'S' curves are anything to worry about. They are no different than what your trains would run through when entering a passing siding or going through a crossover. You aren't going to be running through the yard turnouts at high speeds (although your kids/grandkids might!Smile, Wink & Grin). If your equipment is properly tuned you shouldn't have any problems.

My 2 Cents

Dave

I'm just a dude with a bad back having a lot of fun with model trains, and finally building a layout!

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    July 2006
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Compound ladder for staging yard question
Posted by Espeefan on Sunday, December 2, 2018 1:10 AM

Hello guys,

Just looking for some input on a design I drew up for a compound yard ladder.  I am working on designing a double deck layout, with one level dedicated completely to a staging yard.  My original plan used a standard ladder track arrangement, but after I decided to increase the center to center track distance to 2.5", I thought I'd give the compound ladder a try, to better maximize the length of all the tracks, and keep them more consistant.  My concern is the 's' curve that is naturally created where the right hand turnout is joined to the left hand turnout, after a short tangent of track.  All turnouts in my plan are #6s.  The 3.63" long straight between the right and left hand turnouts should ease the effect of the 's' curve, but will it be enough?  I hope to run all the usual modern day equipment, but is that possible?  I thought of using #8 turnouts in place of the two #6s, which cause the 's' curve, but when I layed them over the plan, I noticed I did not gain anything.  Probably due to me keeping the same center to center track distance, which requires a 3.63" long straight between the #6 turnouts.  With #8s, I need no extra track to maintain the spacing.

http://s4.photobucket.com/user/Espeefan/media/Compound%20ladder_zpstvbsccvq.jpg.html

 

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