We were at a friend's house last night. He is building a new home, currently living in the guest house he just sort of finished. While there, I noticed boxes if G scale track, buildings and trains. He plans to set them up.
I know a lot about wiring a layout, but nothing about garden layouts. He is a total novice.
Do people use conduit, or just heavy wire for track busses, etc? How often are feeders placed? What are the rails made of?
Thanks.
It takes an iron man to play with a toy iron horse.
First off, I have never wired, or done anything else on a garden layout. So that what I say with a grain of salt. But here is what I would do. I would run a power bus made of 14 gauge house wire all around the layout. 14 gauge is overkill electrically speaking, but it is mechanically rugged and easy to find used for cheap. I would solder everything, I would not trust those suitcase connectors to stay conductive after spending some time out doors in the rain. I would run jumpers from the track bus to every other section of track. If a single rail jumper stops conducting, due to corrosion, water, squirrels, what ever, the track section will still get power from the jumper at the other end. I would make provisions to easily unplug and take the power pack indoors, out of the weather when I wasn't running the layout.
David Starr www.newsnorthwoods.blogspot.com
Might want to post the question over on the Garden Railway section of the forums.
Good luck,
Richard
This sister forum probably knows a lot about the topic:
http://cs.trains.com/grw/f/91.aspx
Layout Design GalleryLayout Design Special Interest Group
Perhaps another answer is - don't. G scale is plenty big for large batteries, not the tiny little things people are trying to cram in HO. Direct radio throttles like CVP's AirWire, and decent battery packs and you don't have to worry about power feeders, track corrosion, or anything.
--Randy
Modeling the Reading Railroad in the 1950's
Visit my web site at www.readingeastpenn.com for construction updates, DCC Info, and more.
We've thought about a large scale running through her flower beds, it would battery powered, no wires.
No experience with it, just our thoughts, if it were to be.
Mike.
My You Tube
I ended up going RC. For about $100, you can get everything and roll your own: battery, controller, charger, receiver, and - most importantly - the motor controller. I used one from Pololu, which makes controls for robotics. Theirs are cheap, simple, and can take commands directly from RC.
Mike Lehman
Urbana, IL
Great question and responses. The Garden Railroads forum doesn't appear to be very active. It might make sense to combine the two forums. Both cover many of the same topics and more and more indoor modelers are bringing G scale inside. Possibly even combine the magazines as well.
MJ4562The Garden Railroads forum doesn't appear to be very active. It might make sense to combine the two forums.
Given that it's summer for most forum members, maybe the Garden folks are spending more time outside enjoying their layouts than spending it in front of a computer. Just a thought...
https://tstage9.wixsite.com/nyc-modeling
Time...It marches on...without ever turning around to see if anyone is even keeping in step.
I soldered a two wire trailer hitch connecter to the track with about 2" of lead wire. The other end of the wiring harnes is attached (witth a suitablely long lead) to the power supply. When I run the train I hook it up and I'm ready to go. When I'm finished I unplug everything and the power supply goes in the garage until next time. Now, having said that, all I have is a simple loop of track around the yard. More complex layouts will probably take more work. Just my 2¢.
Tom
Life is simple - eat, drink, play with trains!
Go Big Red!
PA&ERR "If you think you are doing something stupid, you're probably right!"
Keep in mind too that you have to clean the track before anything moves. Litterally. Track power is a pain. Plus ants and such. Which is why large scale uses batteries. It does allow things you cannt do i. Smaller scale. Like working rotary snow plows.
A pessimist sees a dark tunnel
An optimist sees the light at the end of the tunnel
A realist sees a frieght train
An engineer sees three idiots standing on the tracks stairing blankly in space
The other issue with wiring a gardening layout (not that I have it) is ensuring the wiring doesn't get damaged from rain. Yes, I know that putting it underground provides some safety, but nothing stops a critter for chewing on it.
The Garden Railways forum doesn't get much traffic. You are better off trying mylargescale.com and/or largescalecentral.com. When I retired I decided to build a garden railroad after many years of HO. There really is quite a learning curve. The forums and Garden Railways magazine gave me the education I needed before a shovelfull of dirt was moved. Battery probably eliminates all of the wiring and track cleaning issues but requires modification of the locomotives. I use plain old DC with a Revolutions RC controller. I used landscape wire for the feeders and ran feeders from a single point to about every 40 feet of track. The track I use (Aristo and Bachmann) has hex head screws to hold sections together and provide electrical continuity. Aristo is no longer in business. Where there are no screws I make sure to solder jumpers between sections. 6 years now and no electrical issues. Our weather is suburban NYC area with plenty of rain. Critters have left the RR alone (fingers crossed) and buildings are stored in the winter. Yes, track must be cleaned on a regular basis but an LGB track cleaner every couple of weeks and a Swiffer other times makes it a lot easier. But then I only have about 150 ft of track. Good luck.
The G scale forum here is pretty dead traffic wise. But I DO have G scale outdoors, at first ground level, now on a raised set up as I get older. I use onboard battery power and live steam to pull my trains. I did away with track power early on and never looked back. Crest Revolution and Airewire make RC systems that can not only control the speed/direction, they can tie into the sound boards from companies like Phoniex Sounds and control that as well. Live steam locomotives was my primary reason for getting into gauge one/G scale. Mike the Aspie
Here is my railway
Here is one of my live steamers
Silly NT's, I have Asperger's Syndrome