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Planning trackwork for future salvage...

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Planning trackwork for future salvage...
Posted by IDRick on Thursday, January 31, 2019 7:34 PM

I will be retiring in about two years and plan on moving to a new home across the state.  The new layout I am presently working on will not make the move but I would like to salvage turnouts, track, and potentially wiring components (such as the wagos).  Any tips on how to do this? 

Current benchwork is L girder topped by 2x2 joists, then 3/8 inch plywood, and finally 1 inch of pink foamboard.  I will attach cork roadbed to the foamboard and use atlas flex track and turnouts.  Which adhesive works best for attaching roadbed + trackwork yet can be removed relatively easily in the future?  I will not ballast the track.

Thanks!

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Posted by mbinsewi on Thursday, January 31, 2019 7:44 PM

For me, I would use regular latex caulk, sparingly, for both the road bed, and the track, and don't caulk down the turnouts, let them "float".  This is what I have done on my current layout.

I take it "wagos" are a type of electrical connector?  Never heard of the term, but thats what a quick search has turned up.

Do they "open" back up after using them? so you can reuse them?

My thoughts on electrical connections, is start over, but that's up to you and how those "wagos" work.

With the latex caulk,  used sparingly, you should have no problem slipping a sharp putty knive, or such tool, under the track, and the road bed, and easily remove both.

I use a tool from my cement finisher days, a margin trowel.  It looks like a small spatula.  I have a few around.  Old habit.

Mike.

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Posted by IDRick on Thursday, January 31, 2019 7:57 PM

Yes, the Wagos will be used to connect the feeders to the bus.  They are very easy to use and are constructed to be reused.  Troubleshooting under the layout will be simplified with the wagos and it just takes seconds to connect a stripped feeder wire.  I have bad knees so less time under the layout, the better!

Good tips on the adhesive.  The margin trowel, is that flat edged or notched like a trowel used for applying tile adhesive? 

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Posted by riogrande5761 on Thursday, January 31, 2019 8:11 PM

I used Atlas track nails and ME spikes to secure track.  It was very easy to pull them out when I dismantled the layout.  No risk of damaging.  Adhesives I didn't feel comfortable with, but I'm risk averse.

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Posted by BigDaddy on Thursday, January 31, 2019 8:12 PM

Recently people talked about stapling roadbed and using Elmers glue for laying track. 

I would definitely not solder turnouts, or probably connectors.

I have a similar intention, but am using a modular approach so I will not have to tear up anything.

Wago connectors seem to be very inexpensive compared to terminal strips.  We had a thread on those a while ago.  Here is what they look like.https://www.wago.com/us/wire-splicing-connectors/splicing-connector/p/222-415

 

Henry

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Posted by mbinsewi on Thursday, January 31, 2019 8:12 PM

IDRick
The margin trowel, is that flat edged or notched like a trowel used for applying tile adhesive?

No, it's not shaped like a conventional trowel, like I said, it's shaped like a small spatula, that you would flip eggs with and has a straight edge. 

Didn't mean to confuse with cement finisher tools.  Found in big box stores, by the concrete stuff.

But I think a sharp putty knive would do you just as well.

Mike.

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Posted by IRONROOSTER on Thursday, January 31, 2019 9:12 PM

Having done this twice (once when I retired and once, unplanned, after I retired) I suggest you do not use glue and do not solder turnouts to track.  I found that track nailed down was easy to salvage.  Soldered flex track was salvaged by cutting off the joint from both sides.  Bench work that is screwed together is easy to take apart for the move. 

Since you're moving in 2 years, I wouldn't bother with scenery unless you just want to experiment. 

Some of the wood in my current (under construction) layout is on at least its 4th layout.  So is some of the track.

Good luck

Paul

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Posted by IDRick on Thursday, January 31, 2019 9:26 PM

Paul and Rio,

You both suggested using nails to attach the roadbed and track.  How well do the nails hold to Foamboard?  I haven't tried it so no prior experience.  Installation of roadbed + track would be quick and easy.  Also would be easy to adjust/modify track placement...  I will do some scenery to practice/learn new tricks.  Thanks for the suggestion!

======  Add in.  Gave it a try on some foamboard.  Track and roadbed move readily when attached with short 1/2 inch brads.  Using a thin layer of adhesive in select locations may be enough to hold.

 

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Posted by BATMAN on Thursday, January 31, 2019 9:42 PM

If done properly caulked track should peel up fast and easy like peeling a magnet off the fridge. I also let my turnouts float and will solder feeders to the T/O if a problem pops up.

I solder my joints and for quick and easy dismantling, I just snip the soldered joiners out and chuck'em. The loss in tack length is minimal.

I snip my feeders at the bus and pull them up with the track. A quick touch of the soldering iron will remove them at the new place.

Cork is generally a write-off.  Foam goes along even if it is only now in chunks to be used for terrain on the next layout.

Wire is usually easy to pull if you have snipped the feeders off close.

Cost more to move benchwork than to build new stuff.

 

Brent

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Posted by ATLANTIC CENTRAL on Thursday, January 31, 2019 9:56 PM

A few thoughts, from someone who has salvaged very little track in nearly 50 years of layout building and unbuilding....

Don't use glue/caulk if you expect to salvage track.

But here is a different idea, build a layout in modules that can be moved, and don't loose any of your efforts.

Even if in two years you only build a few modules, with good palnning there is a good chance they can be incorporated into the next layout.

Personally, I glue track with very strong adhesive caulk, BUT, I do not glue down turnouts....

BUT, I do solder all rail joints, and, it is within my skill set to unsolder them as needed.

I don't use cork or foam, plywood and homasote here. I save a whole module/section, or I save very little from it........

Sheldon

 

    

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Posted by mlehman on Thursday, January 31, 2019 11:59 PM

If you're using foam underneath, then spikes won't hold, even though that's what I'd recommend otherwise. You're pretty much stuck with some sort of adhesive. Beyond taking the specific advice on brands, etc given here, I'd experiment by using the same materials and some spare snaptrack to create some different examples, let them fully dry, then peel up to see what works best with the specific combination of materials you intend to use. I'm pretty leery of the adhesive approach myself, although it seems to worrk fine for some.

Mike Lehman

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Posted by riogrande5761 on Friday, February 1, 2019 6:22 AM

IDRick

Paul and Rio,

You both suggested using nails to attach the roadbed and track.  How well do the nails hold to Foamboard?  I haven't tried it so no prior experience.  Installation of roadbed + track would be quick and easy.  Also would be easy to adjust/modify track placement...  I will do some scenery to practice/learn new tricks.  Thanks for the suggestion!

======  Add in.  Gave it a try on some foamboard.  Track and roadbed move readily when attached with short 1/2 inch brads.  Using a thin layer of adhesive in select locations may be enough to hold. 

I don't use foam board as subroadbed, although I know some do.  Of course it's light weight but as you found, it doesn't hold tracknails, ME spikes or small brads.  So thats the down side.

I am old school and after building 3 good sized layouts with 1/2 plywood or OSB, I find it works very well and holds nails.  Yes, I bend a few when driving them in but not a big deal.

I like nails and ME spikes because they can easily be removed with a pair of needle nose plyers and I've had to pull track up a number of times on my last layout when I had water issues in the basement and had to remove a couple of sections of benchwork.  Even if you don't have to do that, you may find you want to revise some track work and again, nails and spikes are easy to remove and put back later.

Also I notice with track nails, you can wiggle the track a tiny bit after they are in which is handy if you need to allign the track a little move even but it's still very secure.  I doubt you can do that with adhesive after it's set, but nails you can made minor adjustments.  The track isn't truly permanent until you ballast use adhesive to secure the ballast.

Here is a photo of my tear-down beginning - I hand't yet secured the ballast.  You can see how cleanly I was able to remove the track and cork.  Both were simply fastened down with Atlas track nails.  With cork I put a nail in each side about one every 3 inches on straight sections (per the old Atlas how-to book) and every 2 inches on the curves.

It almost seems like a trendy thing these days to use foam, but since you must use adhesives to hold everything together, to me that's a down side.  Less flexible.  You have to break bonds or wait for it to set-up before doing more, etc. 

What if you put your track down with adhesive and you find it's wonky?  Yep, you have to peel it up carefully and hope you don't rip rail out of ties or bend it or damage it. If you use track nails or spikes, simply remove with needle-nose plyers and adjust/relay.  You can even tweak track slightly if it's nailed down as it can be gently pushed one way or the other but still be secure to the substrate.  I really like these benefits.

Before building it is good to weight the pro's and con's to old school plywood/OSB with nails or spikes vs. foam and adhesives.

Rio Grande.  The Action Road  - Focus 1977-1983

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Posted by kasskaboose on Friday, February 1, 2019 10:28 AM

Removing traci is far easier when secure with Elmer's glue.  You just wet it and it can get removed from the cork.  I did that on most of the track from the 1st to the current layout.  Some of the track got bent, but I didn't mind since I put it in sidings that can appear far less maintained than the mainline.

Here's also another vote for ME spikes.  They are easy to install and nearly invisible.  Removing them is easy with a hobby knife or a very thin file gently slipped uner the track.

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Posted by mbinsewi on Friday, February 1, 2019 11:21 AM

kasskaboose
Here's also another vote for ME spikes.

Just one little glitch, that has been brought up earlier, the OP is using a 1" foam layer over the bench work.

Spikes won't work with foam.

Mike.

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Posted by riogrande5761 on Friday, February 1, 2019 11:51 AM

mbinsewi
 
kasskaboose
Here's also another vote for ME spikes. 

Just one little glitch, that has been brought up earlier, the OP is using a 1" foam layer over the bench work.

Spikes won't work with foam.

Mike.

Yep, funs over!

.

.

.

Unless it's not to late to change to a different substrate, then ME spikes could be used.  Is it too late?  Or is it never too late.

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Posted by IDRick on Friday, February 1, 2019 12:32 PM

Sorry, too late to change the substrate.  The FB is glued down to the plywood, fascia has been added, and I'm drawing centerlines for trackwork.  I did debate FB versus other substrates at the start and finally decided to try FB for the subroadbed.

Thanks guys, very good advice and tips in this thread!  Most helpful! 

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Posted by BATMAN on Friday, February 1, 2019 1:35 PM

I used foam on open grid because I like to try new things. I would do it again except for one change. I used spline for some of the mainline and in other areas, I used foam as a sub-roadbed. Next time I will use spline or plywood for the mainline everywhere. The reason being, the track is a little more rock and rolly where foam is the sub-roadbed, this is evident in my videos where the very top heavy camera on a flat car amplify the imperfections. 

With spline, you don't need cork roadbed.

Having sidings and yards with slight undulations brings reality to my early 1900s era layout where they didn't worry as much about engineering perfect infrastructure. 

While the areas where the subroadbed is foam have not caused any problems at all, a more solid perfectly level mainline is more desirable for a modern era RR.

I also can put my 200lbs on the foam by just putting down a 18" x 30" piece of plywood to kneel on. It leaves no trace I was ever there.

  

  

Top heavy camera car amplifies any imperfections.

Brent

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Posted by doctorwayne on Friday, February 1, 2019 1:53 PM

There's really no good reason to not solder track, including turnouts, together.  If you can solder, you can unsolder, too.
I also see no reason to not ballast the track.  Ballast, applied using diluted white glue, can be easily softened by an application of "wet" water, and the track then lifted for more complete cleaning, and re-use later.
While the suggestion to use caulk is probably appropriate for track on foam, ballast, applied as noted above, will do the job, too.

Wayne

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Posted by IDRick on Friday, February 1, 2019 4:42 PM

Hello Wayne, I'm a big fan of your work!  But I must confess, if my skills improved 200%, they would then equal 0.5% of your skills...  I am a novice when it comes to soldering so I will be practicing before soldering feeders on my layout.  I will also solder joiners for curved flextrack. I do not know how to "desolder" trackwork (besides heating and removing feeders).  Probably a good skill to learn now while I'm building a short term layout.

Painting rail and ballasting adds "realism" to the track but at this stage, I will put those tasks further down on my to-do list.  Since I'm playing and learning, it probably is a good idea to try it out on some scrap track.  Does the ballast on cork roadbed remove as easily with "wet water" as ballast on foam? 

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Posted by doctorwayne on Saturday, February 2, 2019 12:15 AM

IDRick
...Does the ballast on cork roadbed remove as easily with "wet water" as ballast on foam?

I would guess that it does, but I've needed to lift ballasted track only a couple of times, both of them where the track was directly atop plywood.
The first was a pair of turnouts forming a cross-over on a double-tracked curve.  It proved to be extraneous, so I removed the turnouts by simply using a soldering iron to re-heat the rail joiners, then using the tip of an old X-Acto blade to push them away from the joint as soon as the solder melted - they were left on the track to which the turnouts were connected.  The area was then wetted, softening the ballast and allowing the turnouts to be lifted.  The rest of the softened ballast was vacuumed-up, and some new flex track cut to fit into the spaces vacated by the turnouts.  The rail joiners were reheated again, and pushed partially onto the new track, allowing trains to run again.  I never bothered to take photos of that operation.

The other incident, also directly atop plywood, was to move a turnout in order to accommodate a new industrial building.
Here's a photo of the general area, with the empty lot for the new factory to the left...

...and the turnout which needed to be re-located...

After removing the nails holding the track and turnout in-place, and moving the rail joiners as described above, the area was sprayed with "wet" water and allowed to sit for a few minutes.  The track and turnout was then lifted...

...and the area cleaned-up...

The same turnout was then repositioned, closer to the nearby street and the tracks re-aligned somewhat in order to accommodate that, and everything then soldered back together...

The newly-laid track (and some of the original, too) was then ballasted...

...and a few days later, was back in service...

IDRick
Hello Wayne, I'm a big fan of your work! But I must confess, if my skills improved 200%, they would then equal 0.5% of your skills... I am a novice when it comes to soldering so I will be practicing before soldering feeders on my layout.

I appreciate your kind words, Rick, but we're all novices when we start out.  I was a lousy solderer, too, but also practiced, and got at least to the semi-competent stage.  It's still not one of my favourite aspects of the hobby, but I can do enough to get by, and you will get at least to that stage, if not further.

Wayne

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Posted by Doughless on Saturday, February 2, 2019 11:11 AM

I've salvaged track and turnouts from two layouts.  After doing that twice, its time to buy fresh.

White glue is much easier to remove than caulk, IMO, which will inevitably stick to the ties.  Maybe others have had better luck.  A good shpritzing with a water bottle loosens the glue, which you'll have to do anyway if you glued down the ballast on the temporary layout. 

I suppose it would be less messy to nail the track to the bed and not ballast at all, or at least not glue down the ballast and vacuum it up.

And I would definitely not solder turnouts if the intent is to remove them.  You can always nip off the ends of soldered flex track if you had to.

- Douglas

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Posted by rrebell on Saturday, February 2, 2019 11:26 AM

Use the clear acrylic caulk, dosn't hold quite as good as the white but good enough and is easier to take up. Less is more in this case because you want to salvage. For power make up your own terminal joiners.

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Posted by gregc on Monday, February 4, 2019 11:27 AM

i recently replaced a hand laid turnout and had to remove the existing one.   I lay my ties on this brown sheething material from the house that is glued to foam using carpenters glue.

after cutting thru some rails and the brown stuff, I was able to separate it from the foam in one piece, possibly to be used elsewhere.

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Posted by MidlandMike on Monday, April 8, 2019 8:40 PM

I have re-read this thread as I am getting ready to put down cork roadbed and HO track on foamboard.  While I can understand that foamboard would not hold a track nail, would cork roadbed over foam hold the nail?

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Posted by riogrande5761 on Monday, April 8, 2019 8:45 PM

MidlandMike

I have re-read this thread as I am getting ready to put down cork roadbed and HO track on foamboard.  While I can understand that foamboard would not hold a track nail, would cork roadbed over foam hold the nail?

 

I would say no, cork will not hold nail properly.  I actually nail my cork down old school, to plywood.  A nail about every 3 inches on straight and ever 2 on curved.

If you are using foam as a base, youll need to use adhesives.

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Posted by rrinker on Tuesday, April 9, 2019 6:54 AM

 If you have a problem lifting track from caulk, you've used too much caulk. It should pop right off with zero damage to the track. This goes back 2 layouts ago, to my first try at using caulk after nailing every layout prior to that. I removed an entire siding I decided was pretty much useless and turnouts aren't cheap - it popped right off, no broken ties, and I was able to reuse the turnout and the long piece of flex track. There was a short fitter piece that just wasn;t worth trying to use elsewhere. And the turnout that was removed was right on the main line, it was easily replaced by a section of flex and once the foam was painted over, hiding the track placement lines, you'd never know it had been there.

 The trick is spreading the caulk out VERY thing. A flexible putty knife works, but so do those plastic coated fake credit cards you get in some of those junk mail offers - bonus those are free and instead of trying to clean them you can just throw them out and use a new one next time. The caulk should like like a nearly clear, shiny area before you stick the track into it - that's all it takes, not gobs and blobs. The track WILL stay, until you take a putty knife to the underside and gently lift it off the roadbed.

                                              --Randy

 


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Posted by SeeYou190 on Tuesday, April 9, 2019 7:59 AM

I have never salvaged track. I consider track to be a one-use item.

.

Once it is in place, drilled, spiked, painted, wired, ballasted, and glued, it becomes very difficult to ever get it out an reuse it again later.

.

-Kevin

.

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Posted by ATLANTIC CENTRAL on Tuesday, April 9, 2019 11:19 AM

rrinker

 If you have a problem lifting track from caulk, you've used too much caulk. It should pop right off with zero damage to the track. This goes back 2 layouts ago, to my first try at using caulk after nailing every layout prior to that. I removed an entire siding I decided was pretty much useless and turnouts aren't cheap - it popped right off, no broken ties, and I was able to reuse the turnout and the long piece of flex track. There was a short fitter piece that just wasn;t worth trying to use elsewhere. And the turnout that was removed was right on the main line, it was easily replaced by a section of flex and once the foam was painted over, hiding the track placement lines, you'd never know it had been there.

 The trick is spreading the caulk out VERY thing. A flexible putty knife works, but so do those plastic coated fake credit cards you get in some of those junk mail offers - bonus those are free and instead of trying to clean them you can just throw them out and use a new one next time. The caulk should like like a nearly clear, shiny area before you stick the track into it - that's all it takes, not gobs and blobs. The track WILL stay, until you take a putty knife to the underside and gently lift it off the roadbed.

                                              --Randy

 

 

Not the caulk I use.......

But I don't glue/caulk the turnouts.

I have never worried with salvaging track, especially after it is ballasted.

Sheldon

    

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Posted by riogrande5761 on Tuesday, April 9, 2019 12:07 PM

SeeYou190

I consider track to be a one-use item.

YMMV, but I don't assume track is by necessity one-use:

Hundreds of dollars worth of track salvaged - and money saved.  Big Smile

Once it is in place, drilled, spiked, painted, wired, ballasted, and glued, it becomes very difficult to ever get it out an reuse it again later.

- Kevin

Of course it depends on how far you get.  The track pictured above was laid on two different layouts (most of it) and is still in very good condition.

I do hope to get much further along this time around than the last two, but assuming track cannot be salavged.  Well, you know what they say about assumpsions.

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Posted by ATLANTIC CENTRAL on Tuesday, April 9, 2019 5:02 PM

riogrande5761

 

 
SeeYou190

I consider track to be a one-use item.

 

YMMV, but I don't assume track is by necessity one-use:

Hundreds of dollars worth of track salvaged - and money saved.  Big Smile

 

 
Once it is in place, drilled, spiked, painted, wired, ballasted, and glued, it becomes very difficult to ever get it out an reuse it again later.

- Kevin

 

Of course it depends on how far you get.  The track pictured above was laid on two different layouts (most of it) and is still in very good condition.

I do hope to get much further along this time around than the last two, but assuming track cannot be salavged.  Well, you know what they say about assumpsions.

 

I have salvaged unballasted track that was not attached with glue/caulk on layouts that were far from being complete.

I have salvaged turnouts under similar conditions.

I don't attach commercial turnouts with caulk for operational and maintenace reasons.

But to approach the construction of a layout with the idea that it could reach some reasonable level of scenic and operational completeness and then expect to salvage the track, especially track attached with adheasive caulk and ballasted, seems to be to be unreasonable at best.

Any such undertaking, which I have briefly experimented with, would in my view be a monumental waste of my most valueable resource - time.

Sheldon 

    

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