QUOTE: Originally posted by dknelson Ellison's multi-part Art of Model Railroading was reprinted in I think various issues of 1965 MR. It has numerous photos of the layout. From time to time letters to MR would mention that the layout had been preserved, but stored, then damaged, then sold ... then silence. Dave Nelson
QUOTE: Originally posted by Sperandeo The most detailed Delta Lines track plan was published with the article "Frank Ellison's Delta Lines," in the November 1955 Model Railroader, page 26. Happy New Year, Andy
QUOTE: Originally posted by dabitsch In 2002 I attended the Tracks in the Sand 2002 NMRA convention in Ft. Lauderdale. The layout tour that I went on visited an O-scale layout that displayed a large station. The layout's owner told us that this station was built by Frank Ellison and was on his Delta Lines. I'm afraid I don't know who the layout owner is, but I'm sure if you contact someone on the 2002 NMRA convention committee through the NMRA, you might be able to track it down. I place Frank Ellison and his Delta Lines in the Model Railroader's Hall of Fame along side John Allen and the Gorre & Daphetid. Frank, I believe, started the concept of operating trains in a realistic fashion to serve industries like a real railroad. This was back in the 1940s according to the articles in Model Builder -- long before John Allen's time. Dale B.
QUOTE: Originally posted by SWchief-2 Hi there. Was the book you mention an Arco Books book? I have one of their books on MR'g, from the fifties, which uses Frank's layout in describing realistic/prototypical MR operations. I am at work so I can't access the book at the moment. If we are not talking about the same book, then this one would be yet an additional resource. I suspect it might be a different book because I think the book I have is written by John Armstrong, but I could be wrong. I'll check tonight when I get home and get back to you in this post. Take care. Greg
Andy Sperandeo MODEL RAILROADER Magazine
QUOTE: Originally posted by ndbprr The layout itself was in an article in MR in the late 40's or early 50's. I dumped all my back issues or I could tell you which one. I also read somewhere that the crack passenger train was pulled by a pacific on which he had removed the lead and trailing truck as they derailed too frequently. The train was operated for a long time (over a year) before anyone even noticed they were gone. I have found the same thing. I use drawbars between engines and passenger cars and nobody has ever noticed. A lot of what we are paying for today is only noticeable in high depth of field photography and I think we could swing back the other way a little and nobody would be able to know the difference when the trains are running.