Dewey,
Thanks for catching my error.
Tom
https://tstage9.wixsite.com/nyc-modeling
Time...It marches on...without ever turning around to see if anyone is even keeping in step.
tstage wrote: Spacing: 150 feet ( 27.5")I
I
That should be 20.6" at 150 feet.
hi pontoonman
13 poles per KM placed at such distance that should the pole rot and fall over it doesn't fall on the railway line.
This will vary depending on which std height pole is being used don't forget the access track between the pole line and railway line
The top lines are signal wires the next cross arm down is phone lines if it is a railway pole
regards John
Roger Hensley= ECI Railroad - http://madisonrails.railfan.net/eci/eci_new.html == Railroads of Madison County - http://madisonrails.railfan.net/ =
Pontoon,
There's an article in the recent 2006 MR issue of How To Build Realistic Layouts called "Stringing details in the sky", by Michael Burgett, about "pole lines" (pg. 30-33) Michael gives the following measurements under the heading Locating a pole line:
"On average, railroad poles are spaced 100 to 150 feet apart. Most poles are placed no closer than 13 feet from the closest rail, and the bottom wires should be a least 27 feet above ground."
The above measurements would have the following equivilance in HO:
I thought that it was a good and informative article, but I wanted more. The rest of the issue is very good, too.
I used Rix Products' poles on my layout, went with the measurements that Michael suggested, and thought they both turned out well.
WOW anyway thanks for the help,
http://cprr.org/Museum/Ephemera/Telegraph_Pole_1864.html
"Lawrence K. Hersh reports that he found the spacing of the CPRR telegraph poles to be 30 poles per mile (176 ft span) "
http://www.du.edu/~jcalvert/tech/cable.htm
Have fun
"Forty poles per mile, the usual pole spacing, gives a span of 132 ft or 40.2 metres. If we assume that each insulator provides 10MΩ insulation, then G = 10-7/40.2 = 2.5 x 10-9 S/m. This is a reasonable value for damp weather and a good line. In dry weather, values of 3000MΩ per mile are not uncommon. This gives G = 2 x 10-13 S/m. A reasonable average value might be G = 10-10 S/m."
I like placing my telphone poles about 15 inches apart. This spacing looks about right in "HO" when viewed from a distance.
Have Fun.... Bob.
I live is a semi-rural/outer suburban region and, in fact, pole spacing locally is very close to 200' as long as the street or highway is straight. Naturally, spacing becomes somewhat less if the street/highway is curving and the lines need to keep fairly parallel to it.
CNJ831
what is the proper distance to install telephone poles in HO scale
thanks for all the hepl in the past. my layout is really starting to shape up.
pontoonman