If you decide to go with plaster-based scenery, you might want to try a product called Durabond 90 (there is also a Durabond 60-the number refers to the setting time in minutes-there may be other setting times available.) I have used it directly over window screen without bothering with the paper towels. I prefer aluminum screen as it holds its shape better than fibreglass. Either way, support it well. This stuff will also stick to wood, plywood, or dry plaster-it helps to wet these surfaces slightly beforehand. For use directly over screen, I mix it to the consistency of a fairly stiff cake icing and apply it with a putty knife or scraper of the appropriate width. If you want a reasonably smooth surface , after you have applied the plaster, use a cheap synthetic brush to smooth the contours, dipping it often in water. Depending on where you wish to use it and the effect you want to achieve, you can mix it to almost any consistency and it will still set up in the allotted time. After it has set, it is possible to scrape down high points,etc. Once it has dried completely (up to a couple of days for a thick application), it is extremely hard, although it can still be drilled. An auto body file is also useful for shaping the hardened plaster. I paint the finished landforms with thinned latex paint - unthinned paint or water-based stains also work well. This material is also great for making bridge piers and abutments, etc. I make moulds from .060 styrene and wipe on a thin coat of vegetable oil with a paper towel to act as a mould release. Durabond 90 is a US Gypsum product (CGC in Canada). I purchased a 15 kg (33 lb) bag at Home Depot for about $18.00 Canadian. In spite of all of the above, don't restrict youself to only one method - in some situations, foam might be a more suitable medium. I hope this information will be of some assistance.
QUOTE: Originally posted by mechanic Originally posted by jshrade ... Fact of the matter is, foam is not an option for me, because quite frankly youI can't fit a 4x8 sheet of foam in the back of a Jeep Wrangler, and I don't have any other means of getting sheet foamto my house. I had the same problem. So I took my knife to the lumber yard and cut the sheet in half. A 4x8 sheet wouldn't fit in my car but 2 4x4 sheets will. Eric Yup; I do the same thing when I load foam into my Jeep Cherokee. Just cut straight down the center score line, and you're set. I think I can fit 10 sheets of foam into my Jeep that way. Ray Breyer Modeling the NKP's Peoria Division, circa 1943 Reply mechanic Member sinceJuly 2004 41 posts Posted by mechanic on Friday, August 12, 2005 6:27 AM Originally posted by jshrade ... Fact of the matter is, foam is not an option for me, because quite frankly youI can't fit a 4x8 sheet of foam in the back of a Jeep Wrangler, and I don't have any other means of getting sheet foamto my house. I had the same problem. So I took my knife to the lumber yard and cut the sheet in half. A 4x8 sheet wouldn't fit in my car but 2 4x4 sheets will. Eric "Friends don't let friends use Bachmann E-Z track switches" Reply chateauricher Member sinceNovember 2004 From: Chateau-Richer, QC (CANADA) 833 posts Posted by chateauricher on Friday, August 12, 2005 1:04 AM QUOTE: Originally posted by robengland It's not strong on its own. It needs supporting, else one day someone is going to reach over the back and put their full weight on it and. But it sure weighs a h-ll of a lot less should you ever have to move your layout. QUOTE: It makes me think flat. You start from flat and work from there. Somehow foam layouts often end up looking flat (I carefully didn't say "always"). The world isn't. With plaster you are draping something over something. It's hard to make flat. Last time I checked, plywood was sold in flat sheets. If you want hills or mountains or valleys, you must add to it — either foam or plaster. Same with foam — just build up the terrain you want. QUOTE: It's not hollow. If you have hidden tracks in a mountain (and who doesn't) then maintenace is much easier if you can pop your head up through open benchwork into an entirely hollow mountain to see what's going on. You can build hollow foam mountains. You only need to have a couple inches of foam around the outside of the moutain. The entire middle of it can be hollow. QUOTE: It doesn't take kindly to spilled solvents or dripped solder. Neither does human flesh. So you just have to be careful when using solvents and solder. And, foam can be repaired with a few pieces of scrap foam, or a layer or two of plaster-cloth. QUOTE: It doesn't take screws well. I tried attaching tortoises to it on little plywood bases with screws and with glue and they still come off sometimes. I tried attaching terminal strips to it with screws, glue and double sided tape and they come off regularly. That is why many foam-based layouts are actually supported on a wooden frame (sometimes topped with a thin (1/4" or more) plywood. BTW, this is what the legs are attached to, Hminky. QUOTE: it doesn't support turnout pivot cranks well. I use a twisting action on a crank up thru the roadbed ina brass tube sleeve. Sometimes the sleeve gets sloppy in the foam as it breaks up a bit. One way to avoid breaking up foam as you pierce it is to drill a pilot hole first (just as you would with wood). One advantage with foam that standard plywood cookie-cutter or spline methods don't have is ... You can design much of the terrain after laying the track without having to plan for it in advance. That allows you to more easily re-do or fudge track alignments, or change your mind about where it goes simply by pulling up your track (easily done if you use glue or caulking). The cookie-cutter and spline methods require you to have everything planned out in advance and makes last minute changes or corrections much more difficult (ie: time-consuming) to do. With a foam-based layout, you can experiment with track layout ideas without the same effort that other methods require. Timothy The gods must love stupid people; they sure made a lot. The only insanity I suffer from is yours. Some people are so stupid, only surgery can get an idea in their heads. IslandView Railroads On our trains, the service is surpassed only by the view ! Reply robengland Member sinceFebruary 2003 From: New Zealand 462 posts Posted by robengland on Thursday, August 11, 2005 9:45 PM Wow fwright, you don't post much but when you do it's worth it. Thanks for the definitive response. At the risk of staying off topic and further fuelling the foam wars, I'd like to add a couple of thoughts from my experience with foam: It's not strong on its own. It needs supporting, else one day someone is going to reach over the back and put their full weight on it and.... It makes me think flat. You start from flat and work from there. Somehow foam layouts often end up looking flat (I carefully didn't say "always"). The world isn't. With plaster you are draping something over something. It's hard to make flat. It's not hollow. If you have hidden tracks in a mountain (and who doesn't) then maintenace is much easier if you can pop your head up through open benchwork into an entirely hollow mountain to see what's going on. It doesn't take kindly to spilled solvents or dripped solder. It doesn't take screws well. I tried attaching tortoises to it on little plywood bases with screws and with glue and they still come off sometimes. I tried attaching terminal strips to it with screws, glue and double sided tape and they come off regularly. it doesn't support turnout pivot cranks well. I use a twisting action on a crank up thru the roadbed ina brass tube sleeve. Sometimes the sleeve gets sloppy in the foam as it breaks up a bit. Plywood for me next time. BTW, to get it home I tied it to the roof of the car. 2" foam is rigid enough to survive the ordeal. Rob Proud owner of the a website sharing my model railroading experiences, ideas and resources. Reply JerryRGS Member sinceJanuary 2002 7 posts Posted by JerryRGS on Thursday, August 11, 2005 9:12 PM I used to use the paper towels with hydrocal. But now I use the Woodland Scenics plaster cloth. It costs more but the speed I can work is great. I can layout plaster cloth ten times faster than paper towels with hydrocal. Plus there is very little mess when using the plaster cloth. JB Reply ukguy Member sinceOctober 2004 From: Mississippi 819 posts Posted by ukguy on Thursday, August 11, 2005 1:11 AM Topic :- FOAM vs CARDBOARD QUOTE: Posted by ukguy Posted: 16 Jul 2005, 12:34:08 I'm gonna say both, although I used the poultry wire and plaster cloth method this time I see the advantages of foam. It shouldnt be too hard to combine the two methods and they both have their merits for different reasons. I havent read anywhere that says it MUST be one or the other. So when I begin construction on the new layout I will decide which method will have the most benefits for a particular area of the layout and use that. Best of both worlds. [:D] Have fun & be safe, Karl. [:D] Karl. Reply selector Member sinceFebruary 2005 From: Vancouver Island, BC 23,330 posts Posted by selector on Wednesday, August 10, 2005 11:50 AM I agree, Fred. In fact, I have become and advocate of the 'eclectic' approach. I like to use at least two methods in combination. You could build up a couple of layers in foam, with the associated and requisite sculpting and modling to vary the terrain, and then build craggier cliffs and hills with wire and plaster over the base foam. Reply fwright Member sinceNovember 2002 From: Colorado 4,075 posts Posted by fwright on Wednesday, August 10, 2005 10:09 AM Did some more thinking last night after posting my response. The 4 primary scenery bases in widespread use that I know of are foam, plaster impregnated gauze, free-standing hard shell Hydrocal; and plaster on screen. Each method tends to produce different types of terrain naturally, and it takes a lot more effort to get a different type of terrain from a given method. The foam lends itself very well to shallow shelf layouts where the proportion of track and structures is relatively high when compared to other layout styles. Foam naturally produces flat and/or smooth terrain that is well-suited for mounting structures on. It also can produce your relatively smooth rolling hills without a lot of effort. Producing craggy Western mountains with numerous gullies and other rough terrain takes a lot of extra time and effort with foam. At the Home Depot where I bought my foam, it only came in 2 ft x 8 ft pieces, and 1.5 in thickness. You can easily cut or snap the pieces to smaller size for transport, since you will rarely use a full size piece in filling in scenery. Hard shell scenery made from plaster soaked towels naturally produces very rough terrain, even when applied over window screen. It takes extra effort to avoid wrinkling the towels to get smooth terrain - and the pressure is on when the plaster sets so quickly! Also, a sturdier underlying form is needed to lay out the paper towels without wrinkles, which is required for smooth terrain. Balled up newspapers and spaced cardboard strips generally aren't good enough. Placing structures on hard shell requires lots of pre-planning or a good supply of blades (plaster dulls them quickly) for whatever cutting device you are using. Typically for structures installed after the scenery base, a hole is cut and some kind of flat base (usually foam or wood) is inserted into the hole. Placing a structure on top of hard shell is likely going to leave gaps around the foundation unless you are going to simulate bulldozing some earth up to the foundation afterwards :-) Plaster on screen has most of the characteristics of hard shell if applied via the paper towel method. Advantage of this method is that you can use whatever plaster is cheapest because of the screen reinforcement. Metal screen provides better forms without additional support, but is hard on the hands and tools, especially when making cutouts for any reason. Fiberglass/plastic window screen may be harder to create the desired form without additional support, but is easier to handle and cut. Due to the pre-existing screen forms, it is somewhat easier to lay the paper towels smoothly than in hardshell. In my humble opinion, plaster on screen is the easiest way to get most any desired terrain type, but is the most difficult to modify at a later date. Plaster on screen is an excellent, easy, inexpensive scenery base for relatively large areas where there are not a lot of tracks cutting through it or structures to be mounted into it. Cutting, fitting, and forming the screen between track routes less than 6 inches apart gets old. Plaster gauze tends to be more expensive, but is much cleaner and easier to apply than paper towels dipped in plaster. The gauze provides the reinforcing strength so that once applied the underlying forms can be removed - just like hardshell. The gauze has a little bit less tendency to wrinkle than the paper towels, so smoother terrain is more easily obtained. I believe some folks even apply the plaster gauze dry and wet it in place - but I have not tried this personally. Cutting plaster gauze is the same as cutting hard shell - almost any kind of saw works, but blades dull quickly. Because smoother, flatter terrain is more easily obtained, mounting structures on top of plaster gauze becomes more acceptable. There will be fewer gaps at the foundation than with hardshell. Weight of plaster is substantial because of the water absorbed in creating the crystal structure. If it takes 20 lbs of plaster to scenic your entire layout, than you probably have added 35 lbs total. Not really all that bad when compared to foam that ends up being plaster-coated for fine detailing. The only time the extra weight really matters is in building frequently moved modules or sections. My personal recommendation is to use foam on shelf and portable layouts, and where there are concentrations of structures. On the more permanent, non-shelf layouts use one of the plaster methods in the other areas, especially if mountainous terrain is desired. Fred Wright jack of all trades....(you know the rest) Picture Gorge and Western Railway - none more picturesque Tillamook Head and Bethel Railway - to Heaven and back Reply fwright Member sinceNovember 2002 From: Colorado 4,075 posts Posted by fwright on Wednesday, August 10, 2005 1:20 AM On my previous layout, which was open grid with plywood/Homasote-like roadbed, I too used Plaster of Paris because of cost and the difficulty in finding Hydrocal. To me the simplest method to span the fairly large areas without any track - it was a harbor layout - and support the plaster, was to use fiberglass window screen material. It's cheap, doesn't cause mysterious electrical shorts, doesn't tear your hands forming it, and staples to the plywood sub-roadbed quickly and easily with a staple gun. I then used the reinforced kitchen paper towels (Bounty?) to dip in the plaster mix instead of the brown paper towels recommended in the MR articles. The window screen was good at preventing the plaster from going on to the carpet below - only the very runniest mix got through! The resulting scenery base survived multiple trips in moving vans without chipping or cracking. The screen and reinforced paper towels solved the plaster of Paris strength problem, and added a very limited amount of flexibility to help resist cracking. For me, installing and forming the screen was much more intuitive then trying to create shapes with cardboard strips (been there, done that). I used scissors to cut the screen, and a staple gun to fasten it. Added cheap wood lath "risers" stapled to benchwork to support screen shape only where needed. Joining 2 pieces of screen was simply jamming the cut edge of the added screen into the mesh of the existing screen, and smoothing the joint with my fingers. If for some reason the joint needed more strength than the edge jam technique provided ( I think I did this once), I would staple through both pieces of screen into a strip of corrugated cardboard. Hope this helps answer your questions. Reply Anonymous Member sinceApril 2003 305,205 posts Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, August 10, 2005 12:02 AM Well I didn't exactly intend to start a 'foam vs plaster' war, or a symposium on 'which is better, open grid, or foam on supports'... Fact of the matter is, foam is not an option for me, because quite frankly youI can't fit a 4x8 sheet of foam in the back of a Jeep Wrangler, and I don't have any other means of getting sheet foamto my house. Not to mention it's nearly impossible to find 2" foam here in the south (most building supply places down here only carry 1/2 and 3/4 inch at best). I built my plywood on L-girder benchwork while I had a pickup truck, so hauling the 4x8 sheets of plywood wasn't a problem then, but that was several months ago, and I'm ready to start working on scenery, which is why plaster has come to mind. As far as cost, I didn't expect this to be a cheap hobby, just a long-lived one, and one I could enjoy for many years, so I only asked about plaster to find out what's been tried with success and what options are available. My plans are to model the piedmont region of Georgia, which consists of mildly rolling hills, distinctive of where I live now. I'll only have one 'mountain' which will only be about a 2x4 section of the layout, and it won't be very big anyway. I'll have four distinct regions on my layout, city and railyard, coal mine and mountain, small town branchline, and rural Georgia whistlestop. The city area will be mostly flat anyway, the coal mine and mountain will only display the lower portion of the mountain and associated foothills, the branchline will be modeled after my local town, which has very gentle hill, and rural Georgia will be primarily flat farmland and fields. Most of my scenic contours will come up from the benchwork, instead of down. The few areas that will be lower than the rest of the layout, I can easily cut out of the plywood base with a jigsaw. I got into this hobby expecting it to take at least a year just to get the basics up and running, and at least another 4 years before all the scenery was in place and I had enough rollingstock and locomotives to run the layout like my dreams depict. I didn't mean to upset anybody who's anti-plaster, but I do want to thank everyone that responded with constructive 'pro-plaster' ideas on scenery. I've read all the how-to's on cardboard lattice and the chickenwire approach, so I'm fairly convinced that's what I'll do. Is plaster of Paris the best type of plaster to use for this method? I can buy a 25 lb bag at Lowes for about $7. I'll also check out that floor leveler stuff next time I'm there! Reply Edit Medina1128 Member sinceApril 2003 From: Clinton, MO, US 4,261 posts Posted by Medina1128 on Tuesday, August 9, 2005 3:06 PM I too, was reluctant to try foam, until I got some, glued it down and started carving. In a sentence, "IT'S GREAT!!" (Apologies to Tony the Tiger). You don't really even have to cover it with plaster. I use a hand wire brush and shape it, a screwdriver to create erosing effects. I paint it an earth color, sprinkle ground foam on while the paint is wet. If you'd like to see some examples, check the January - March(?) 2005 issues of Model Railroader for Pelle Soeborg's series. My layout is a combination of plywood subroadbed and foam. I happened to go by a construction site and they were throwing away huge pieces of foam in the dumpster. They told me to "help myself"... I wished I'd had a bigger truck that day. I just layer it, carve it, paint it, sprinkle ground foam on it, and voila! If you live in an area where there's construction going on, stop by and talk to the foreman. They're usually going to have scraps that are more than big enough for you to use. If nothing else, give it a try, you may like it. Marlon See pictures of the Clinton-Golden Valley RR Reply CBQ_Guy Member sinceSeptember 2003 From: North Central Illinois 1,458 posts Posted by CBQ_Guy on Tuesday, August 9, 2005 2:38 PM I'm kinda with Harold but we're old guys! You could do a lot of your landforming with drywall mud over some scrap foam pieces or possibly some crumpled wetted newspaper. "Paul [Kossart] - The CB&Q Guy" [In Illinois] ~ Modeling the CB&Q and its fictional 'Illiniwek River-Subdivision-Branch Line' in the 1960's. ~ Reply selector Member sinceFebruary 2005 From: Vancouver Island, BC 23,330 posts Posted by selector on Monday, August 8, 2005 7:28 PM Well, my 8' X 11' 'two-by-four' and plywood monster, heavy though it is, has 1" extruded foam glued directly to the 5/8" plywood. I have no way of confirming that the 2" foam suffices as its own table top, but surely Ray knows of what he speaks...he's running trains just fine that way, and he isn't the only one on this forum. My arrangement is rock solid, although diagonal two-by-four braces helped hugely. I will admit that the foam is not rugged in that you can't clamber up on it without some form of load-spreading item, like pieces of plywood. I learned that right quick. For those smart enough to make shelf-type layouts where they don't have to climb up on them, I'll bet that even the 2" foam, by itself, is overkill. And, the 2" stuff sure makes adding layers for sculpting topography a breeze. Literally minutes...once the glue is set. All this said, I admire the work, and respect the perspective of both of you gentlemen. To each his own. Reply bogp40 Member sinceJuly 2004 From: Weymouth, Ma. 5,199 posts Posted by bogp40 on Monday, August 8, 2005 4:24 PM The Great Foam Controversey, part ?????? I like to use this stuff, under vinyl siding and insulating foundations. Oh, every so often it works great to sculpt my scenery on the layout. But to have the trains running on foam instead of spline, not ready for that, and no one can convince me of it's structural integrity, to only glue the railroad together. Must be my old school thoughts and 30 years as a finish carpenter/ builder. On the other hand, for light weight, portablitity, speed of construction, and costs etc. foam should work . Just my thoughts. Bob K. Modeling B&O- Chessie Bob K. www.ssmrc.org Reply hminky Member sinceJanuary 2003 From: Dover, DE 1,313 posts Posted by hminky on Monday, August 8, 2005 1:20 PM My railroad depicts the 1870's so I take pictures that look like the 1870's photos. The photos from the period always had the train stopped and everyone got out and posed on the train. They are the brakeman. When I was doing On30 and the equipment was 1920's I tried to duplicate that photo style. I just think the "blue foam" movement is over cooked. My 4x8 test railroad uses 9/16 OSB for the top and backboard. It duplicates the $28 a sheet foam for only about $12. The foam has no structure to attach un-wobbly legs. If you build such a structure you might as well have built with wood. A directional lighting system such as my 4x8 has cannot be attached to a foam layout cheaply. I detail my 4x8 at: http://www.pacificcoastairlinerr.com/4x8/ I just have not seen an advantage in blue foam, not that there is anything wrong with blue foam. Just a thought Reply orsonroy Member sinceMarch 2002 From: Elgin, IL 3,677 posts Posted by orsonroy on Monday, August 8, 2005 1:15 PM QUOTE: Originally posted by hminky How do you attach legs to an all foam layout? Just a thought Harold What are legs? My layout's attached to the walls with shelf brackets. If you MUST have legs, 2x2 legs, attached to 1x2 L girders glued & screwed to the foam are all you really "need". But even if you decide to add a full sheet of 1/4" plywood under the foam, it's still a lot faster & cheaper than building L girders & plywood roadbed. Ray Breyer Modeling the NKP's Peoria Division, circa 1943 Reply Adelie Member sinceMay 2003 From: Santa Fe, NM 1,169 posts Posted by Adelie on Monday, August 8, 2005 11:52 AM OK Harold, I'll bite. Who are the guys on top of the freight cars, and what are they doing? I'm an open grid fan, too. I don't mind the woodwork and I'm in no ru***o get to the finished state. The science of all this ends about the time the plan is complete (which, of course, it never is) and then the art takes over. After I lay subroadbed, I take some time to look at it, complete with the track lines. It might stay that way for weeks. Sometimes I get a better idea and a section gets redone. Pretty painless (and cheap) to do before the roadbed and track is laid. Then I do the same thing with the roadbed down. Then again with track laid. I sort of enjoy the construction process. I have a 40 x 14 N-scale layout underway, and it's amazing the amount of subroadbed I can get from a sheet of plywood. Weight is not a consideration, the layout is not going to be moved*. In the end, it is the final product that matters. Whether somebody uses open-grid, a door, a solid table, foam or their backyard makes very little difference. As long as they enjoy it and it makes them happy, that's what this is all about. * - Unless my lovely wife, who seems to want to pack up our things and move every few years, builds up a head of steam in that direction that I can not bleed off. If so, the railroad won't be moved, but disassembled into its components and those reassembled later in some other form.[:(!][banghead][banghead] - Mark Reply hminky Member sinceJanuary 2003 From: Dover, DE 1,313 posts Posted by hminky on Monday, August 8, 2005 10:20 AM How do you attach legs to an all foam layout? Just a thought Harold Reply orsonroy Member sinceMarch 2002 From: Elgin, IL 3,677 posts Posted by orsonroy on Monday, August 8, 2005 9:34 AM QUOTE: Originally posted by hminky I cannot comprehend this obsession with foam. It first showed up in a September 1959 Model Railroader. I had a chance to use the blue foam back in the mid-70's and saw no advantage it's use in a permanent layout. Hi Harold, As on of the forum's foam layout advocates, I'll chime in on why many of us feel that foam is a superior layout construction medium than plaster & it's associated framework. First of all, is foam perfect for every application? Nope. If you're building a spaghetti bowl, handlaying track, or running #1 gauge steel live steam, you'll need to use wood. On to individual points: QUOTE: The cardboard lattice covered with plaster towels sure costs less. Absolutely not true. Foam is the ENTIRE layout base, from the subroadbed to the "add flocking" layer. If you buy all the materials required to built a traditional layout from that level, your costs are between 2 to 3 times that per square foot, as compared to a sheet of foam. With foam, you have to buy the sheet of foam. With traditional construction, you have to buy the foundation subroadbed lumber, upright support lumber, roadbed lumber, screws, cardboard, screen wire, newspaper and plaster. QUOTE: At $28 a sheet I can think of better investments than foam sheets for scenery. a 2" thick piece of 4'x8' pink foam cost $19.50, as of last Friday. A 4x8 sheet of 3/4" BC plywood cost $32.98. YOu can use ALL of the foam when constructing a layout, but you've got a LOT of scrap plywood if you're cutting out cookie-cutter subroadbed. QUOTE: The argument that it easier to make below track level terrain with the foam is highly overrated. Just cut a section out of the plywood and frame like this: Very nice modeling. Now how long did it take you to fire up the jigsaw and cut out that plywood? I can "fire up" my utility knife and metal brush a lot faster, AND be scenicing the area within 15 minutes. You'll barely be mixing the plaster... QUOTE: That was all done with cardboard lattice and plastered towels, with less mess than cleaning foam "boogers" off everything. Foam is a "dry mess, with zero prep time. Cleanup is accomplished with a couple of minutes of vacuuming. Plaster is a "wet mess", which requires prepping the plaster (mixing), a finite working time FOR the plaster, and a few minutes of cleaning up at the utility sink. If I get some foam boogers on the carpet, all I have to do is vacuum. If you get plaster on the carpet, you have to swear, stop what you're doing, wa***he plaster off your hands, clean up the carpeting, and mix a new batch of plaster, since the first batch has already started to set up. Is foam better? I sure think so. Construction time to get trains up & running is ten times faster than building L-girder layouts. Overall cost is less. I can spend 15 minutes after work adding a stream or small hills to a foam layout, and another 15 the mext day adding the initial scenery level. YOu can't do ANY plastering in 15 minutes, let alone 1/2 hour. But hey, either way you're building scenery. Find a method you like and stick with it. Just remember that there's several ways to skin a cat! Ray Breyer Modeling the NKP's Peoria Division, circa 1943 Reply selector Member sinceFebruary 2005 From: Vancouver Island, BC 23,330 posts Posted by selector on Monday, August 8, 2005 3:12 AM jshrade, I have limited experience; one modest layout, and I did use the foam. I enjoyed its use, but I can certainly see the benefits of other methods, not the least of which is a substantial reduction in costs. The photos regularly posted by these other two gentlemen speak for themselves. Plaster, especially if painted, and if left undisturbed, should last a very long time....years. However, it will have to be shaped and supported, or reinforced, with an eye to helping it to last. So, I would use metallic screen with apertures anywhere from 1/8" to 1". So, window screen to chicken wire. Over that, at least two layers, overlapped, of plaster cloth of the type you describe. When that has cured, you can then affix thin molded plaster rocks, more plaster, or sculptamold, or what have you. Remember that many use cardboard strips, either stapled or hot glued, to form their sub-structures. Some even use crumpled newsprint. So, you have options, and may wi***o try your hand at several test sections to see which works best for you. Reply ukguy Member sinceOctober 2004 From: Mississippi 819 posts Posted by ukguy on Sunday, August 7, 2005 8:24 PM I'm with you on that point Harold, (at the risk of getting chased into my corner) esp. on the pricing front, I cannot see how foam can be more 'application flexible' than contouring your own base with either cardboard lattice or wire mesh/poultry fencing, (although I have no practical experience of foam to base this on). Sure, I can see 'some' advantages in certain situations or layout locales, but to do an entire layout this way sitting on 2" of foam to me seems a waste of resource/time/effort/$, its just a preference thing I guess but thats my [2c]. An open grid bench work with a fixed roadbed surely gives you more options for sub-roadlevel modeling rather than having to sit the entire roadbed on 2" of foam just so you can excavate in one or two specific areas [%-)] , and if you do take this route you can only go down as deep (or almost as deep) as the layer of foam you are modeling on anyway, before you need to add more terrain under the foambed, which kind of for me defeats the purpose of using foam for the ability of lower scenery. I'm going to try it on a section of my new layout to see what its all about, but I sure wont be laying it all over the place and then covering it up anyway making it obsolete. Like I said, it's a preference thing, no right or wrong, just diff of opinion. Have fun & be safe, Karl. Reply hminky Member sinceJanuary 2003 From: Dover, DE 1,313 posts Posted by hminky on Sunday, August 7, 2005 8:02 PM I cannot comprehend this obsession with foam. It first showed up in a September 1959 Model Railroader. I had a chance to use the blue foam back in the mid-70's and saw no advantage it's use in a permanent layout. The cardboard lattice covered with plaster towels sure costs less. At $28 a sheet I can think of better investments than foam sheets for scenery. The argument that it easier to make below track level terrain with the foam is highly overrated. Just cut a section out of the plywood and frame like this: That was all done with cardboard lattice and plastered towels, with less mess than cleaning foam "boogers" off everything. The river is below the plywood. Just a thought Harold Reply 12 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! 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Originally posted by jshrade ... Fact of the matter is, foam is not an option for me, because quite frankly youI can't fit a 4x8 sheet of foam in the back of a Jeep Wrangler, and I don't have any other means of getting sheet foamto my house. I had the same problem. So I took my knife to the lumber yard and cut the sheet in half. A 4x8 sheet wouldn't fit in my car but 2 4x4 sheets will. Eric
Ray Breyer
Modeling the NKP's Peoria Division, circa 1943
Originally posted by jshrade ... Fact of the matter is, foam is not an option for me, because quite frankly youI can't fit a 4x8 sheet of foam in the back of a Jeep Wrangler, and I don't have any other means of getting sheet foamto my house. I had the same problem. So I took my knife to the lumber yard and cut the sheet in half. A 4x8 sheet wouldn't fit in my car but 2 4x4 sheets will. Eric "Friends don't let friends use Bachmann E-Z track switches" Reply chateauricher Member sinceNovember 2004 From: Chateau-Richer, QC (CANADA) 833 posts Posted by chateauricher on Friday, August 12, 2005 1:04 AM QUOTE: Originally posted by robengland It's not strong on its own. It needs supporting, else one day someone is going to reach over the back and put their full weight on it and. But it sure weighs a h-ll of a lot less should you ever have to move your layout. QUOTE: It makes me think flat. You start from flat and work from there. Somehow foam layouts often end up looking flat (I carefully didn't say "always"). The world isn't. With plaster you are draping something over something. It's hard to make flat. Last time I checked, plywood was sold in flat sheets. If you want hills or mountains or valleys, you must add to it — either foam or plaster. Same with foam — just build up the terrain you want. QUOTE: It's not hollow. If you have hidden tracks in a mountain (and who doesn't) then maintenace is much easier if you can pop your head up through open benchwork into an entirely hollow mountain to see what's going on. You can build hollow foam mountains. You only need to have a couple inches of foam around the outside of the moutain. The entire middle of it can be hollow. QUOTE: It doesn't take kindly to spilled solvents or dripped solder. Neither does human flesh. So you just have to be careful when using solvents and solder. And, foam can be repaired with a few pieces of scrap foam, or a layer or two of plaster-cloth. QUOTE: It doesn't take screws well. I tried attaching tortoises to it on little plywood bases with screws and with glue and they still come off sometimes. I tried attaching terminal strips to it with screws, glue and double sided tape and they come off regularly. That is why many foam-based layouts are actually supported on a wooden frame (sometimes topped with a thin (1/4" or more) plywood. BTW, this is what the legs are attached to, Hminky. QUOTE: it doesn't support turnout pivot cranks well. I use a twisting action on a crank up thru the roadbed ina brass tube sleeve. Sometimes the sleeve gets sloppy in the foam as it breaks up a bit. One way to avoid breaking up foam as you pierce it is to drill a pilot hole first (just as you would with wood). One advantage with foam that standard plywood cookie-cutter or spline methods don't have is ... You can design much of the terrain after laying the track without having to plan for it in advance. That allows you to more easily re-do or fudge track alignments, or change your mind about where it goes simply by pulling up your track (easily done if you use glue or caulking). The cookie-cutter and spline methods require you to have everything planned out in advance and makes last minute changes or corrections much more difficult (ie: time-consuming) to do. With a foam-based layout, you can experiment with track layout ideas without the same effort that other methods require. Timothy The gods must love stupid people; they sure made a lot. The only insanity I suffer from is yours. Some people are so stupid, only surgery can get an idea in their heads. IslandView Railroads On our trains, the service is surpassed only by the view ! Reply robengland Member sinceFebruary 2003 From: New Zealand 462 posts Posted by robengland on Thursday, August 11, 2005 9:45 PM Wow fwright, you don't post much but when you do it's worth it. Thanks for the definitive response. At the risk of staying off topic and further fuelling the foam wars, I'd like to add a couple of thoughts from my experience with foam: It's not strong on its own. It needs supporting, else one day someone is going to reach over the back and put their full weight on it and.... It makes me think flat. You start from flat and work from there. Somehow foam layouts often end up looking flat (I carefully didn't say "always"). The world isn't. With plaster you are draping something over something. It's hard to make flat. It's not hollow. If you have hidden tracks in a mountain (and who doesn't) then maintenace is much easier if you can pop your head up through open benchwork into an entirely hollow mountain to see what's going on. It doesn't take kindly to spilled solvents or dripped solder. It doesn't take screws well. I tried attaching tortoises to it on little plywood bases with screws and with glue and they still come off sometimes. I tried attaching terminal strips to it with screws, glue and double sided tape and they come off regularly. it doesn't support turnout pivot cranks well. I use a twisting action on a crank up thru the roadbed ina brass tube sleeve. Sometimes the sleeve gets sloppy in the foam as it breaks up a bit. Plywood for me next time. BTW, to get it home I tied it to the roof of the car. 2" foam is rigid enough to survive the ordeal. Rob Proud owner of the a website sharing my model railroading experiences, ideas and resources. Reply JerryRGS Member sinceJanuary 2002 7 posts Posted by JerryRGS on Thursday, August 11, 2005 9:12 PM I used to use the paper towels with hydrocal. But now I use the Woodland Scenics plaster cloth. It costs more but the speed I can work is great. I can layout plaster cloth ten times faster than paper towels with hydrocal. Plus there is very little mess when using the plaster cloth. JB Reply ukguy Member sinceOctober 2004 From: Mississippi 819 posts Posted by ukguy on Thursday, August 11, 2005 1:11 AM Topic :- FOAM vs CARDBOARD QUOTE: Posted by ukguy Posted: 16 Jul 2005, 12:34:08 I'm gonna say both, although I used the poultry wire and plaster cloth method this time I see the advantages of foam. It shouldnt be too hard to combine the two methods and they both have their merits for different reasons. I havent read anywhere that says it MUST be one or the other. So when I begin construction on the new layout I will decide which method will have the most benefits for a particular area of the layout and use that. Best of both worlds. [:D] Have fun & be safe, Karl. [:D] Karl. Reply selector Member sinceFebruary 2005 From: Vancouver Island, BC 23,330 posts Posted by selector on Wednesday, August 10, 2005 11:50 AM I agree, Fred. In fact, I have become and advocate of the 'eclectic' approach. I like to use at least two methods in combination. You could build up a couple of layers in foam, with the associated and requisite sculpting and modling to vary the terrain, and then build craggier cliffs and hills with wire and plaster over the base foam. Reply fwright Member sinceNovember 2002 From: Colorado 4,075 posts Posted by fwright on Wednesday, August 10, 2005 10:09 AM Did some more thinking last night after posting my response. The 4 primary scenery bases in widespread use that I know of are foam, plaster impregnated gauze, free-standing hard shell Hydrocal; and plaster on screen. Each method tends to produce different types of terrain naturally, and it takes a lot more effort to get a different type of terrain from a given method. The foam lends itself very well to shallow shelf layouts where the proportion of track and structures is relatively high when compared to other layout styles. Foam naturally produces flat and/or smooth terrain that is well-suited for mounting structures on. It also can produce your relatively smooth rolling hills without a lot of effort. Producing craggy Western mountains with numerous gullies and other rough terrain takes a lot of extra time and effort with foam. At the Home Depot where I bought my foam, it only came in 2 ft x 8 ft pieces, and 1.5 in thickness. You can easily cut or snap the pieces to smaller size for transport, since you will rarely use a full size piece in filling in scenery. Hard shell scenery made from plaster soaked towels naturally produces very rough terrain, even when applied over window screen. It takes extra effort to avoid wrinkling the towels to get smooth terrain - and the pressure is on when the plaster sets so quickly! Also, a sturdier underlying form is needed to lay out the paper towels without wrinkles, which is required for smooth terrain. Balled up newspapers and spaced cardboard strips generally aren't good enough. Placing structures on hard shell requires lots of pre-planning or a good supply of blades (plaster dulls them quickly) for whatever cutting device you are using. Typically for structures installed after the scenery base, a hole is cut and some kind of flat base (usually foam or wood) is inserted into the hole. Placing a structure on top of hard shell is likely going to leave gaps around the foundation unless you are going to simulate bulldozing some earth up to the foundation afterwards :-) Plaster on screen has most of the characteristics of hard shell if applied via the paper towel method. Advantage of this method is that you can use whatever plaster is cheapest because of the screen reinforcement. Metal screen provides better forms without additional support, but is hard on the hands and tools, especially when making cutouts for any reason. Fiberglass/plastic window screen may be harder to create the desired form without additional support, but is easier to handle and cut. Due to the pre-existing screen forms, it is somewhat easier to lay the paper towels smoothly than in hardshell. In my humble opinion, plaster on screen is the easiest way to get most any desired terrain type, but is the most difficult to modify at a later date. Plaster on screen is an excellent, easy, inexpensive scenery base for relatively large areas where there are not a lot of tracks cutting through it or structures to be mounted into it. Cutting, fitting, and forming the screen between track routes less than 6 inches apart gets old. Plaster gauze tends to be more expensive, but is much cleaner and easier to apply than paper towels dipped in plaster. The gauze provides the reinforcing strength so that once applied the underlying forms can be removed - just like hardshell. The gauze has a little bit less tendency to wrinkle than the paper towels, so smoother terrain is more easily obtained. I believe some folks even apply the plaster gauze dry and wet it in place - but I have not tried this personally. Cutting plaster gauze is the same as cutting hard shell - almost any kind of saw works, but blades dull quickly. Because smoother, flatter terrain is more easily obtained, mounting structures on top of plaster gauze becomes more acceptable. There will be fewer gaps at the foundation than with hardshell. Weight of plaster is substantial because of the water absorbed in creating the crystal structure. If it takes 20 lbs of plaster to scenic your entire layout, than you probably have added 35 lbs total. Not really all that bad when compared to foam that ends up being plaster-coated for fine detailing. The only time the extra weight really matters is in building frequently moved modules or sections. My personal recommendation is to use foam on shelf and portable layouts, and where there are concentrations of structures. On the more permanent, non-shelf layouts use one of the plaster methods in the other areas, especially if mountainous terrain is desired. Fred Wright jack of all trades....(you know the rest) Picture Gorge and Western Railway - none more picturesque Tillamook Head and Bethel Railway - to Heaven and back Reply fwright Member sinceNovember 2002 From: Colorado 4,075 posts Posted by fwright on Wednesday, August 10, 2005 1:20 AM On my previous layout, which was open grid with plywood/Homasote-like roadbed, I too used Plaster of Paris because of cost and the difficulty in finding Hydrocal. To me the simplest method to span the fairly large areas without any track - it was a harbor layout - and support the plaster, was to use fiberglass window screen material. It's cheap, doesn't cause mysterious electrical shorts, doesn't tear your hands forming it, and staples to the plywood sub-roadbed quickly and easily with a staple gun. I then used the reinforced kitchen paper towels (Bounty?) to dip in the plaster mix instead of the brown paper towels recommended in the MR articles. The window screen was good at preventing the plaster from going on to the carpet below - only the very runniest mix got through! The resulting scenery base survived multiple trips in moving vans without chipping or cracking. The screen and reinforced paper towels solved the plaster of Paris strength problem, and added a very limited amount of flexibility to help resist cracking. For me, installing and forming the screen was much more intuitive then trying to create shapes with cardboard strips (been there, done that). I used scissors to cut the screen, and a staple gun to fasten it. Added cheap wood lath "risers" stapled to benchwork to support screen shape only where needed. Joining 2 pieces of screen was simply jamming the cut edge of the added screen into the mesh of the existing screen, and smoothing the joint with my fingers. If for some reason the joint needed more strength than the edge jam technique provided ( I think I did this once), I would staple through both pieces of screen into a strip of corrugated cardboard. Hope this helps answer your questions. Reply Anonymous Member sinceApril 2003 305,205 posts Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, August 10, 2005 12:02 AM Well I didn't exactly intend to start a 'foam vs plaster' war, or a symposium on 'which is better, open grid, or foam on supports'... Fact of the matter is, foam is not an option for me, because quite frankly youI can't fit a 4x8 sheet of foam in the back of a Jeep Wrangler, and I don't have any other means of getting sheet foamto my house. Not to mention it's nearly impossible to find 2" foam here in the south (most building supply places down here only carry 1/2 and 3/4 inch at best). I built my plywood on L-girder benchwork while I had a pickup truck, so hauling the 4x8 sheets of plywood wasn't a problem then, but that was several months ago, and I'm ready to start working on scenery, which is why plaster has come to mind. As far as cost, I didn't expect this to be a cheap hobby, just a long-lived one, and one I could enjoy for many years, so I only asked about plaster to find out what's been tried with success and what options are available. My plans are to model the piedmont region of Georgia, which consists of mildly rolling hills, distinctive of where I live now. I'll only have one 'mountain' which will only be about a 2x4 section of the layout, and it won't be very big anyway. I'll have four distinct regions on my layout, city and railyard, coal mine and mountain, small town branchline, and rural Georgia whistlestop. The city area will be mostly flat anyway, the coal mine and mountain will only display the lower portion of the mountain and associated foothills, the branchline will be modeled after my local town, which has very gentle hill, and rural Georgia will be primarily flat farmland and fields. Most of my scenic contours will come up from the benchwork, instead of down. The few areas that will be lower than the rest of the layout, I can easily cut out of the plywood base with a jigsaw. I got into this hobby expecting it to take at least a year just to get the basics up and running, and at least another 4 years before all the scenery was in place and I had enough rollingstock and locomotives to run the layout like my dreams depict. I didn't mean to upset anybody who's anti-plaster, but I do want to thank everyone that responded with constructive 'pro-plaster' ideas on scenery. I've read all the how-to's on cardboard lattice and the chickenwire approach, so I'm fairly convinced that's what I'll do. Is plaster of Paris the best type of plaster to use for this method? I can buy a 25 lb bag at Lowes for about $7. I'll also check out that floor leveler stuff next time I'm there! Reply Edit Medina1128 Member sinceApril 2003 From: Clinton, MO, US 4,261 posts Posted by Medina1128 on Tuesday, August 9, 2005 3:06 PM I too, was reluctant to try foam, until I got some, glued it down and started carving. In a sentence, "IT'S GREAT!!" (Apologies to Tony the Tiger). You don't really even have to cover it with plaster. I use a hand wire brush and shape it, a screwdriver to create erosing effects. I paint it an earth color, sprinkle ground foam on while the paint is wet. If you'd like to see some examples, check the January - March(?) 2005 issues of Model Railroader for Pelle Soeborg's series. My layout is a combination of plywood subroadbed and foam. I happened to go by a construction site and they were throwing away huge pieces of foam in the dumpster. They told me to "help myself"... I wished I'd had a bigger truck that day. I just layer it, carve it, paint it, sprinkle ground foam on it, and voila! If you live in an area where there's construction going on, stop by and talk to the foreman. They're usually going to have scraps that are more than big enough for you to use. If nothing else, give it a try, you may like it. Marlon See pictures of the Clinton-Golden Valley RR Reply CBQ_Guy Member sinceSeptember 2003 From: North Central Illinois 1,458 posts Posted by CBQ_Guy on Tuesday, August 9, 2005 2:38 PM I'm kinda with Harold but we're old guys! You could do a lot of your landforming with drywall mud over some scrap foam pieces or possibly some crumpled wetted newspaper. "Paul [Kossart] - The CB&Q Guy" [In Illinois] ~ Modeling the CB&Q and its fictional 'Illiniwek River-Subdivision-Branch Line' in the 1960's. ~ Reply selector Member sinceFebruary 2005 From: Vancouver Island, BC 23,330 posts Posted by selector on Monday, August 8, 2005 7:28 PM Well, my 8' X 11' 'two-by-four' and plywood monster, heavy though it is, has 1" extruded foam glued directly to the 5/8" plywood. I have no way of confirming that the 2" foam suffices as its own table top, but surely Ray knows of what he speaks...he's running trains just fine that way, and he isn't the only one on this forum. My arrangement is rock solid, although diagonal two-by-four braces helped hugely. I will admit that the foam is not rugged in that you can't clamber up on it without some form of load-spreading item, like pieces of plywood. I learned that right quick. For those smart enough to make shelf-type layouts where they don't have to climb up on them, I'll bet that even the 2" foam, by itself, is overkill. And, the 2" stuff sure makes adding layers for sculpting topography a breeze. Literally minutes...once the glue is set. All this said, I admire the work, and respect the perspective of both of you gentlemen. To each his own. Reply bogp40 Member sinceJuly 2004 From: Weymouth, Ma. 5,199 posts Posted by bogp40 on Monday, August 8, 2005 4:24 PM The Great Foam Controversey, part ?????? I like to use this stuff, under vinyl siding and insulating foundations. Oh, every so often it works great to sculpt my scenery on the layout. But to have the trains running on foam instead of spline, not ready for that, and no one can convince me of it's structural integrity, to only glue the railroad together. Must be my old school thoughts and 30 years as a finish carpenter/ builder. On the other hand, for light weight, portablitity, speed of construction, and costs etc. foam should work . Just my thoughts. Bob K. Modeling B&O- Chessie Bob K. www.ssmrc.org Reply hminky Member sinceJanuary 2003 From: Dover, DE 1,313 posts Posted by hminky on Monday, August 8, 2005 1:20 PM My railroad depicts the 1870's so I take pictures that look like the 1870's photos. The photos from the period always had the train stopped and everyone got out and posed on the train. They are the brakeman. When I was doing On30 and the equipment was 1920's I tried to duplicate that photo style. I just think the "blue foam" movement is over cooked. My 4x8 test railroad uses 9/16 OSB for the top and backboard. It duplicates the $28 a sheet foam for only about $12. The foam has no structure to attach un-wobbly legs. If you build such a structure you might as well have built with wood. A directional lighting system such as my 4x8 has cannot be attached to a foam layout cheaply. I detail my 4x8 at: http://www.pacificcoastairlinerr.com/4x8/ I just have not seen an advantage in blue foam, not that there is anything wrong with blue foam. Just a thought Reply orsonroy Member sinceMarch 2002 From: Elgin, IL 3,677 posts Posted by orsonroy on Monday, August 8, 2005 1:15 PM QUOTE: Originally posted by hminky How do you attach legs to an all foam layout? Just a thought Harold What are legs? My layout's attached to the walls with shelf brackets. If you MUST have legs, 2x2 legs, attached to 1x2 L girders glued & screwed to the foam are all you really "need". But even if you decide to add a full sheet of 1/4" plywood under the foam, it's still a lot faster & cheaper than building L girders & plywood roadbed. Ray Breyer Modeling the NKP's Peoria Division, circa 1943 Reply Adelie Member sinceMay 2003 From: Santa Fe, NM 1,169 posts Posted by Adelie on Monday, August 8, 2005 11:52 AM OK Harold, I'll bite. Who are the guys on top of the freight cars, and what are they doing? I'm an open grid fan, too. I don't mind the woodwork and I'm in no ru***o get to the finished state. The science of all this ends about the time the plan is complete (which, of course, it never is) and then the art takes over. After I lay subroadbed, I take some time to look at it, complete with the track lines. It might stay that way for weeks. Sometimes I get a better idea and a section gets redone. Pretty painless (and cheap) to do before the roadbed and track is laid. Then I do the same thing with the roadbed down. Then again with track laid. I sort of enjoy the construction process. I have a 40 x 14 N-scale layout underway, and it's amazing the amount of subroadbed I can get from a sheet of plywood. Weight is not a consideration, the layout is not going to be moved*. In the end, it is the final product that matters. Whether somebody uses open-grid, a door, a solid table, foam or their backyard makes very little difference. As long as they enjoy it and it makes them happy, that's what this is all about. * - Unless my lovely wife, who seems to want to pack up our things and move every few years, builds up a head of steam in that direction that I can not bleed off. If so, the railroad won't be moved, but disassembled into its components and those reassembled later in some other form.[:(!][banghead][banghead] - Mark Reply hminky Member sinceJanuary 2003 From: Dover, DE 1,313 posts Posted by hminky on Monday, August 8, 2005 10:20 AM How do you attach legs to an all foam layout? Just a thought Harold Reply orsonroy Member sinceMarch 2002 From: Elgin, IL 3,677 posts Posted by orsonroy on Monday, August 8, 2005 9:34 AM QUOTE: Originally posted by hminky I cannot comprehend this obsession with foam. It first showed up in a September 1959 Model Railroader. I had a chance to use the blue foam back in the mid-70's and saw no advantage it's use in a permanent layout. Hi Harold, As on of the forum's foam layout advocates, I'll chime in on why many of us feel that foam is a superior layout construction medium than plaster & it's associated framework. First of all, is foam perfect for every application? Nope. If you're building a spaghetti bowl, handlaying track, or running #1 gauge steel live steam, you'll need to use wood. On to individual points: QUOTE: The cardboard lattice covered with plaster towels sure costs less. Absolutely not true. Foam is the ENTIRE layout base, from the subroadbed to the "add flocking" layer. If you buy all the materials required to built a traditional layout from that level, your costs are between 2 to 3 times that per square foot, as compared to a sheet of foam. With foam, you have to buy the sheet of foam. With traditional construction, you have to buy the foundation subroadbed lumber, upright support lumber, roadbed lumber, screws, cardboard, screen wire, newspaper and plaster. QUOTE: At $28 a sheet I can think of better investments than foam sheets for scenery. a 2" thick piece of 4'x8' pink foam cost $19.50, as of last Friday. A 4x8 sheet of 3/4" BC plywood cost $32.98. YOu can use ALL of the foam when constructing a layout, but you've got a LOT of scrap plywood if you're cutting out cookie-cutter subroadbed. QUOTE: The argument that it easier to make below track level terrain with the foam is highly overrated. Just cut a section out of the plywood and frame like this: Very nice modeling. Now how long did it take you to fire up the jigsaw and cut out that plywood? I can "fire up" my utility knife and metal brush a lot faster, AND be scenicing the area within 15 minutes. You'll barely be mixing the plaster... QUOTE: That was all done with cardboard lattice and plastered towels, with less mess than cleaning foam "boogers" off everything. Foam is a "dry mess, with zero prep time. Cleanup is accomplished with a couple of minutes of vacuuming. Plaster is a "wet mess", which requires prepping the plaster (mixing), a finite working time FOR the plaster, and a few minutes of cleaning up at the utility sink. If I get some foam boogers on the carpet, all I have to do is vacuum. If you get plaster on the carpet, you have to swear, stop what you're doing, wa***he plaster off your hands, clean up the carpeting, and mix a new batch of plaster, since the first batch has already started to set up. Is foam better? I sure think so. Construction time to get trains up & running is ten times faster than building L-girder layouts. Overall cost is less. I can spend 15 minutes after work adding a stream or small hills to a foam layout, and another 15 the mext day adding the initial scenery level. YOu can't do ANY plastering in 15 minutes, let alone 1/2 hour. But hey, either way you're building scenery. Find a method you like and stick with it. Just remember that there's several ways to skin a cat! Ray Breyer Modeling the NKP's Peoria Division, circa 1943 Reply selector Member sinceFebruary 2005 From: Vancouver Island, BC 23,330 posts Posted by selector on Monday, August 8, 2005 3:12 AM jshrade, I have limited experience; one modest layout, and I did use the foam. I enjoyed its use, but I can certainly see the benefits of other methods, not the least of which is a substantial reduction in costs. The photos regularly posted by these other two gentlemen speak for themselves. Plaster, especially if painted, and if left undisturbed, should last a very long time....years. However, it will have to be shaped and supported, or reinforced, with an eye to helping it to last. So, I would use metallic screen with apertures anywhere from 1/8" to 1". So, window screen to chicken wire. Over that, at least two layers, overlapped, of plaster cloth of the type you describe. When that has cured, you can then affix thin molded plaster rocks, more plaster, or sculptamold, or what have you. Remember that many use cardboard strips, either stapled or hot glued, to form their sub-structures. Some even use crumpled newsprint. So, you have options, and may wi***o try your hand at several test sections to see which works best for you. Reply ukguy Member sinceOctober 2004 From: Mississippi 819 posts Posted by ukguy on Sunday, August 7, 2005 8:24 PM I'm with you on that point Harold, (at the risk of getting chased into my corner) esp. on the pricing front, I cannot see how foam can be more 'application flexible' than contouring your own base with either cardboard lattice or wire mesh/poultry fencing, (although I have no practical experience of foam to base this on). Sure, I can see 'some' advantages in certain situations or layout locales, but to do an entire layout this way sitting on 2" of foam to me seems a waste of resource/time/effort/$, its just a preference thing I guess but thats my [2c]. An open grid bench work with a fixed roadbed surely gives you more options for sub-roadlevel modeling rather than having to sit the entire roadbed on 2" of foam just so you can excavate in one or two specific areas [%-)] , and if you do take this route you can only go down as deep (or almost as deep) as the layer of foam you are modeling on anyway, before you need to add more terrain under the foambed, which kind of for me defeats the purpose of using foam for the ability of lower scenery. I'm going to try it on a section of my new layout to see what its all about, but I sure wont be laying it all over the place and then covering it up anyway making it obsolete. Like I said, it's a preference thing, no right or wrong, just diff of opinion. Have fun & be safe, Karl. Reply hminky Member sinceJanuary 2003 From: Dover, DE 1,313 posts Posted by hminky on Sunday, August 7, 2005 8:02 PM I cannot comprehend this obsession with foam. It first showed up in a September 1959 Model Railroader. I had a chance to use the blue foam back in the mid-70's and saw no advantage it's use in a permanent layout. The cardboard lattice covered with plaster towels sure costs less. At $28 a sheet I can think of better investments than foam sheets for scenery. The argument that it easier to make below track level terrain with the foam is highly overrated. Just cut a section out of the plywood and frame like this: That was all done with cardboard lattice and plastered towels, with less mess than cleaning foam "boogers" off everything. The river is below the plywood. Just a thought Harold Reply 12 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! 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QUOTE: Originally posted by robengland It's not strong on its own. It needs supporting, else one day someone is going to reach over the back and put their full weight on it and.
QUOTE: It makes me think flat. You start from flat and work from there. Somehow foam layouts often end up looking flat (I carefully didn't say "always"). The world isn't. With plaster you are draping something over something. It's hard to make flat.
QUOTE: It's not hollow. If you have hidden tracks in a mountain (and who doesn't) then maintenace is much easier if you can pop your head up through open benchwork into an entirely hollow mountain to see what's going on.
QUOTE: It doesn't take kindly to spilled solvents or dripped solder.
QUOTE: It doesn't take screws well. I tried attaching tortoises to it on little plywood bases with screws and with glue and they still come off sometimes. I tried attaching terminal strips to it with screws, glue and double sided tape and they come off regularly.
QUOTE: it doesn't support turnout pivot cranks well. I use a twisting action on a crank up thru the roadbed ina brass tube sleeve. Sometimes the sleeve gets sloppy in the foam as it breaks up a bit.
QUOTE: Posted by ukguy Posted: 16 Jul 2005, 12:34:08 I'm gonna say both, although I used the poultry wire and plaster cloth method this time I see the advantages of foam. It shouldnt be too hard to combine the two methods and they both have their merits for different reasons. I havent read anywhere that says it MUST be one or the other. So when I begin construction on the new layout I will decide which method will have the most benefits for a particular area of the layout and use that. Best of both worlds. [:D] Have fun & be safe, Karl.
Marlon
See pictures of the Clinton-Golden Valley RR
Modeling B&O- Chessie Bob K. www.ssmrc.org
QUOTE: Originally posted by hminky How do you attach legs to an all foam layout? Just a thought Harold
- Mark
QUOTE: Originally posted by hminky I cannot comprehend this obsession with foam. It first showed up in a September 1959 Model Railroader. I had a chance to use the blue foam back in the mid-70's and saw no advantage it's use in a permanent layout.
QUOTE: The cardboard lattice covered with plaster towels sure costs less.
QUOTE: At $28 a sheet I can think of better investments than foam sheets for scenery.
QUOTE: The argument that it easier to make below track level terrain with the foam is highly overrated. Just cut a section out of the plywood and frame like this:
QUOTE: That was all done with cardboard lattice and plastered towels, with less mess than cleaning foam "boogers" off everything.