Mike,
without anything better to do, I have been playing with my track planning tool (SCARM - a freebie) and made the following 4 by 7ft. plan, using the old Marklin tin-plate track.
... and a couple of 3D views:
Now if I had the space and the funds...
Marklin M-track is readily available on the German edition of Ebay, so sourcing is not an issue. Prices are moderate, although there are a few expensive items, like the turntable, the roundhouse and the bridges. But, hey, wouldn´t it be fun?
That was really neat, dont think I have ever seen that episode of that show. I am going to try to find a pair of the old ATSF F7's from Marklin. I miss my Lionel ones, but could not tollerate the noise they made when running. A pair of the diecast Marklin's will fill that need. Need to find a new home for my brass 2-8-0 so I have some $$ to spend. Mike
Silly NT's, I have Asperger's Syndrome
Sir Madog Did you know that a similar layout made it to TV fame in the US in 1965? Here´s the proof:
Did you know that a similar layout made it to TV fame in the US in 1965?
Here´s the proof:
So the question asked was "where is the conference to be held"? I thought that the question was going to be more important.
"Mr. Solo, this is our train room. Do you think that this is a layout or a train set?"
I am feeling somewhat better today, so I was able to take a second chance at converting that M track plan into a C track plan.
It worked - not perfectly, though, as three pieces of track will have to be shortened. Those areas are marked with a red circle in the track plan.
C track can be shortened, but it is a fiddly task. I´ll search the web for a how-to on this one.
I wish I still had my box full of M track. I do really enjoy classic Marklin trains from the 1960's and early 70's with analog control. Should have never got rid of what I had. I had a whole box of M track given to me for the cost of shipping. Probably never get that chance again. Mike
as promised, here is a picture ofv the track plan, not yet transfered to C-Gleis track.
I am battling some health issues today, so I don´t know when I will be able to do that.
Edit:
Mike, I have been trying to adapt this plan to C track, but failed. The track geometry is so much different and C track lacks a lot of short sections which I´d require to get everything fitting correctly.
I have never understood why Marklin changed the geometry so much. There was no need to do that.
Thanks Ulrich, I worked abit on restoring my set up to operation, got the Uhlenbrock stuff remounted to the control area and partialy wired up. Need to clean out under the table so I can mount the power strip and hook it up better this time around. It was a messy temporary set up before. I ran out of energy to do much more today. Mowing the yard and a bit of house clean up took what energy I had. Mike
emdmike I would love to see the track plan for that layout. Mike
You´ll get it tomorrow!
The green is just painted wood table top. I would love to see the track plan for that layout. Mike
I just found this video on Youtube, showing one of the dealer display layouts Marklin sold to the dealers for display in their shop windows. The video shows the splendor of the good old days - depsite being a far cry from the realism achieved with today´s methods and materials.
I think those layouts have a character of their own. I sure wish I had the room for building one just like it.
Well, here is the video:
Scenery was simply painted onto the table, using oil paints and sawdust for texturing the "green areas" - simple, but effective!
Btw - what´s that green stuff on your benchwork?
Edit: I just found the track plan - this layout is about 4 by 7ft.!
My 12 yr old grandson has been diagnosed with autism. He loves trains..amongst other things. He wanted to help me build a new layout in our downsized retirement home without a basement. What I did was purchase a Woodland scenics Grand Valley layout kit. It was started and done very well with superb benchwork. It is not my first choice for a new layout, but it will be fun. The reason I mention is that with that system, we tackle things in segments with the easy to follow directions. This way he does not get frustrated as easily as he would on a scratchbuilt larger layout. WIll it be my best layout ever,,probably not. But it will be FUN! An that is the goal, frustration will cause him to have an episode and I want to avoid that. So my thought is build the layout in sections and set realistic expectations in regards to time, functionality and looks. Its a hobby after all :-)
I can certainly relate because I have ADHD which has similar symptoms and is often misdiagnosed as autism and vice versa even by doctors. As it affects my model railroading, I have difficulty completing a project because I keep getting sidetracked by something else that graps my attention and I won't complete that task either before getting sidetracked yet again. My brain wants to keep changing channels. As a result, it seems to take me about 3 times as long to complete a project as I feel that it should. The other problem is I end up with building materials, parts, tools, etc. spread all over the layout as well as my workbench which further impacts my ability to get things done in a timely manner. I am not exaggerating when I say I spend more time looking for my tools than I do actually using them. I wish I had an answer other than to just say persevere as best you can and hope that eventually you will accomplish what you hope to. It's that hope that keeps me going.
Sir Madog--
Gears falling out all over the place can happen with larger engines too...sorry to hear about the skills eroding.
Mike--
Guess my boys are pretty fortunate to be high functioning. However, there are still issues--trouble tying shoes, difficulties using hands to do things like woodwork--sensory issues, but not nearly as difficult as you describe. Still there though--like being a little sensitive to the uneven ground of a pitching mound or batter's box, and that not "feeling" right.
Thank you for being so candid and brave as to share insights into your situation.
Also, if you should ever get to the Harrisburg, PA area, let me know you are coming. I don't know all the railfan spots, as I'm a steam guy, but I know a few of them. I live within about one mile, as the crow flies, from the west end of the Rockville Bridge, and therefore am also close to Enola Yard. My little town of Marysville exists only because of the two railroads that called it home. Most of the old, smaller houses in town were/are occupied by railroaders or their descendants (younger home renters now moving in). It's a classic "railroad town" with the good or bad that that entails.
John
although my friend came over to my place, we did not work on the wiring of my Swiss layout. I made a terrible mistake while servicing my little Z scale 2-10-0 staem loco. I opened the gear cover plate and the gears and wheels fell out! It took me an hour of fiddling and fettling before I had to accept the fact, that I won´t be able to get them in again. My friend will give it a try and I am sure he will succeed.
Nevertheless, I had to learn a big lesson today. Over the years and due to some nasty heart issues and strokes, I have lost a number of my skills. Worse than that is the loss of confidence into what I am doing. I will not be able to finish that Z scale layout, so it has to go. I will also sell the Swiss narrow gauge layout onece it is finished, for which I need help.
When the two layouts are sold, I will revisit my physical and mental situation to see whether I can somehow stay active in this hobby, which has been a true companion to me for 53 years. At the moment, prospects are not to good.
Instead of doing the wiring, I was able to finish the promised track plan - without the 3D graphics, though. Good news is it will fit on your table (with some fettling), bad news is that the track you will need won´t come cheap.
Well, here it is:
It´s a nice layout for playing with your trains, but certainly not for re-enacting prototypical operation, should that be the route you want to follow.
Just a first thought - maybe I find some other options!
I definatly do not like change, really kicks my anxiety up really high. The dignosis of AS didn't even exhist in the DSM(the manual they use for Dx in the states) when I was a kid. Asperger's Syndrome was official a diagnosis a couple years after I graduated high school. Its amazing that within that dx, there is such a range, I am pretty high functioning most of the time, I can read, write, drive, ride my motorcycle(as long as its not to cold or raining). But the neighbor boy with the same Dx at 14 yrs old cannot read, barely write. He is much closer to classic autism than I am. I am thankfull that I am able to function as well as I do, but it is a sruggle many days to do anything. I just want to crawl into a dark corner and hide. The feelings can be so overwhelming. I am told that autistics are in what is called "fight or flight" mode all the time. So everything that is sensory inputs are ramped way up. A sunny day is like white hot welding light if I do not wear my sunglasses when I go out. Rain hitting my skin if I get caught out on my motorcycle is like having knifes stabbing me. I need a weighted blanket to sleep thru the night, without it I wake up almost every hour or so. But after my diagnosis, and a fast learning experience, I am able to cope most of the time. My therapist used a mix of CBT and ABA therapy styles to retrain me and break some bad behaviors. Mike
PRR8259 Mike-- I am very familiar with Aspergers, as my one son allegedly has it, and the other son after having his ears congested at age 2, through about age 4, was termed "developmentally delayed" and is allegedly also on the Autistic Spectrum. The special education teacher at my local high school, whose son has played baseball with my oldest son for several years, states that just about everybody in the general population has about 10 traits that are associated with Autism/Aspergers, and for similar reasons, I believe it is somewhat "overdiagnosed" and "overlabeled" today. Many people (I'm not saying this is you or trying to minimze what you go through) just have to have a label or an 'ism to explain what is wrong...when in some cases they just learn differently and need help tailoring assignments to their particular learning style, or help staying focused and on task. My developmentally delayed son gets a special teaching assistant to make sure he understands the test instructions, and does the same material, but in a smaller class setting in his public school. When I was a kid, we had longer recesses. The boys, in particular, need those recess periods or they have trouble focusing in school, as psychological studies have shown. Yet because our education is positively woeful in America, and we think good old memorization of facts is not education (when it should still be--you need to memorize stuff to be any good at all for some professions), we have taken away the recess time (in my state) and we somehow think it will help people focus more, when nothing could be further from the truth. I've been told the very same things that make professional engineers and architects good at their job--designing--are the very same traits that most diagnosed as Aspergers or Autistic have. Most professional engineers allegedly have some form of ADD, ADHD, etc. yet at the same time may be very focused on mathematics and science, and are able to complete complex multi-input design tasks, while at the same time not always "fitting in" with the general public socially. Most model railroaders I've ever met exhibit some of the same traits attributed to Aspergers, and it is now believed that Albert Einstein had Aspergers. Indeed many model railroaders are actually also civil engineers. So Mike, you are in good company here! Most of us get overwhelmed at times, walk away from the hobby for a break, and then perhaps come back and tackle that "overwhelming" layout or scenery project at a time when it doesn't seem so bad. Try to buy the Armstrong book "Track Planning for Realistic Operation" as it is a great reference source. I've known many modelers who were so overwhelmed they never completed a layout, so I would say start with something simple you can do, and then add on to later, when you feel more accomplished at the various arts required. If all you do is build a loop to run and enjoy trains on, and that makes you happy--then so be it. Please send me a private message so I can possibly help you out. Maybe I don't need something that you can use, and would just send it to you, if it would help. John
I am very familiar with Aspergers, as my one son allegedly has it, and the other son after having his ears congested at age 2, through about age 4, was termed "developmentally delayed" and is allegedly also on the Autistic Spectrum.
The special education teacher at my local high school, whose son has played baseball with my oldest son for several years, states that just about everybody in the general population has about 10 traits that are associated with Autism/Aspergers, and for similar reasons, I believe it is somewhat "overdiagnosed" and "overlabeled" today. Many people (I'm not saying this is you or trying to minimze what you go through) just have to have a label or an 'ism to explain what is wrong...when in some cases they just learn differently and need help tailoring assignments to their particular learning style, or help staying focused and on task. My developmentally delayed son gets a special teaching assistant to make sure he understands the test instructions, and does the same material, but in a smaller class setting in his public school.
When I was a kid, we had longer recesses. The boys, in particular, need those recess periods or they have trouble focusing in school, as psychological studies have shown. Yet because our education is positively woeful in America, and we think good old memorization of facts is not education (when it should still be--you need to memorize stuff to be any good at all for some professions), we have taken away the recess time (in my state) and we somehow think it will help people focus more, when nothing could be further from the truth.
I've been told the very same things that make professional engineers and architects good at their job--designing--are the very same traits that most diagnosed as Aspergers or Autistic have. Most professional engineers allegedly have some form of ADD, ADHD, etc. yet at the same time may be very focused on mathematics and science, and are able to complete complex multi-input design tasks, while at the same time not always "fitting in" with the general public socially.
Most model railroaders I've ever met exhibit some of the same traits attributed to Aspergers, and it is now believed that Albert Einstein had Aspergers. Indeed many model railroaders are actually also civil engineers.
So Mike, you are in good company here! Most of us get overwhelmed at times, walk away from the hobby for a break, and then perhaps come back and tackle that "overwhelming" layout or scenery project at a time when it doesn't seem so bad.
Try to buy the Armstrong book "Track Planning for Realistic Operation" as it is a great reference source.
I've known many modelers who were so overwhelmed they never completed a layout, so I would say start with something simple you can do, and then add on to later, when you feel more accomplished at the various arts required. If all you do is build a loop to run and enjoy trains on, and that makes you happy--then so be it.
Please send me a private message so I can possibly help you out. Maybe I don't need something that you can use, and would just send it to you, if it would help.
I am in the states,my whole European railway interest started with my aunt and uncle. He was German and before he passed away, brought me back both an LGB starter set, and a few Marklin HO items from thier trips to Germany. I have always had odd tastes in trains, and the railways of Germany really caught on with me. I do still enjoy USA railways, I go railfanning when I can, and I have a couple older brass HO model in my display case. I live in Indiana and have never been to Europe in person, hopefully some day though. Mike
Well from here it looks like a nice layout so far! Keep at it. Glad things are working out better for you than previously! The German trains have not really been my thing, though I did once own LGB stuff and run it outside. I don't dislike European trains, but I simply prefer the look of American steam from mainly the 1930's era (not so much some of the later designs).
My one good (local) train friend actually did himself in at 32. He was bipolar and off his meds. Left beautiful young wife and 2 boys behind. It's taken me more than a decade to find another guy to attend shows with...though I live in one of the most historically significant railroad areas in the U.S., it seems most are just plain tired of hearing anything about trains or otherwise just apathetic to them.
News flash, you dont grow out of it once you turn 18. But with proper teaching and coaching, they can learn to cope with it. I turned my obsession with working on old lawn mowers and lawn tractors into a profession and now work for a large John Deere dealership. Probably the best pay I have had in many years. I managed to survive my teens, the bullying in school any many failed jobs. Didn't get my diagnosis till I was almost 41 and in marriage counceling. The two of us learning to cope with my Asperger's, has saved my mariage and probably my life. Autistics are very prone to suicide and I have considered it many times over the years. Thankfully I never attemped it. With that nasty preformed thing put away in my shed, I relaid the track plan in the picture. The pic was how my layout looked before I got the preformed thing. I still need to wire up my Uhlenbrock digital controlers. I am short a few curved track sections and 4 turnouts to complete the plan though. The track plan comes from page 62 in the booklet that comes with the digital Marklin sets(second pic is my set I got). Mike
Thank you for sharing the information.
My wife wonders how our boys will cope as adults...others just say "oh, they'll grow out of it". Yes, maybe to a certain degree, but the sensitivity to textures and things not feeling "right" doesn't go away, and can hamper my son a little when he pitches if the mound doesn't feel right.
At the same time, he's extremely focused on becoming a better baseball player, and in two years is out-pitching other kids who have been doing it for many more years.
Kindly let me know where you are located, at least privately...are you in Europe or over here?
P.S. I'm at work...will read anything else later.
I agree with it being over diagnosed many times, but from my scores on several of the tests, there is no doubt about my diagnosis. On the AQ test, one of the initial ones, anything over 31 is considered autistic and further testing needed, I scored a 42. One the RAAD-S, anything in the 130 and above puts me in the HFA/Asperger's area, I scored a 221 out of 227. The seperate Dr that saw me to get me into vocational rehab, only took 30 min to put me on the spectrum, it was that obvious he said! I just wish the support and diagnosis had been there when I was a child, so that I could have developed better coping skills much earlier in life. I just have to step away from anything that becomes to frustrating or I risk a meltdown. If I had the $$, I would have that table of mine professionaly built into a nice Marklin layout, then all I would have to do is enjoy the trains. Mike
I have 2 boxes of nice buildings, they are worth what I gave for it. I could restore the layout, if I know what it was and what it originaly looked like. Its off the table now, so I look forward to your design. That table folds up against the frame work on the wall, giving me a depth of 10 inches for anything perminant on the layout. So any tunnels and mountains need to be under that or have a removeable section. I do want a tunnel in one corner or even two, but I could use the removable Noch ones they sell. Mike
Mike - I doubt it´s a Noch. The way it looks it should head for the dumpster, not worth bothering.
Sorry!
I´ll guess I have that plan ready by Sunday - a friend of mine is joining me tomorrow afternoon to help me complete the wiring on my Swiss layout. It´s only finishing touches, but they involve soldering, which I absolutely hate after having suffered severe burns decades ago when grabbing a hot soldering iron when it fell off the table. Stupid me! Believe me, I had choice words then!
We dont know what model it is actualy, or even if its a Noch. Here are 2 pics I took of it. The lake was partialy filled to make a spot for the depot by the previous owner. Mike
Here is the table with some of my C track laid out. Mike
I am making good progress planning the layout and I think that layout in the above picture can be made to fit to a 4 by 7 ft. table, using Marklin´s C-Gleis track.
Just as an alternative - which Noch plastic scenery base do you have? Maybe I can develop a track plan for it as well. Gives you an option.
I only got the Uhlenbrock stuff as the shop I go thru in Zionsville, Indiana has a bunch of it from a collection, several Intelleboxs and other bits of that system. I was selling off my USA 2 rail stuff and had plenty of shop credit to use. There is a chapter of the ETE club, but I dont think they are based close to me, wanna say up near Chicago possibly. I used to see them at the larger shows in Indianapolis, but haven't for a couple years now. For those that do not know what its like to live with Asperger's or high functioning autism, there are plenty of sites and blogs on what the condition is like, both from a clinical standpoint and thru the eyes of those that live with it. And like any spectrum disorder, no 2 people are alike, and how well I function each day, depends on that day itself. Mike
I cant say that I understand your condition but I do understand frustration. When it happens to me on the trains and I start to get aggrevated I have learned that it is time to stop and do something else.
Joe Staten Island West