LION is a monk. Monks take a vow of Stability. I have been here for almost 40 years, althoug my present layout is the third one that I have built. Neither I nor the building is going anywhere.
So I know nothing of portable layouts. and I have 14 scale miles of track on this layout.
ROAR
The Route of the Broadway Lion The Largest Subway Layout in North Dakota.
Here there be cats. LIONS with CAMERAS
People did different things.
I took everything off my modules including trees. They stacked on top of each other in the bed of my pickup. Another member built shelves in his van for each complete module, buildings and all. Then another member had this tiny little car that he removed all the seats except for the drivers. None of our members trailered their modules. I have seen clubs with club owned module transport trailers.
Modules go through some rough times. Heat, cold, rain, snow, humidity, rough roads and even traffic accidents. One club member had a cap on the bed of his pickup. His modules were on shelves above the bed in the cap. He got rear ended at a traffic light and the door of the cap opened and two modules slid out onto the car that hit him. I would keep my modules in the truck for weeks at a time. I had a roll up cover to keep the rain and snow off.
Pete.
"One difference between pessimists and optimists is that while pessimists are more often right, optimists have far more fun."
Hi all,
I've been thinking about Modular Layouts lately and curious about best practices.
For layouts that live in trailers to transport, how do you brace the modules? Do you remove structures? Are dual axle trailers preferred?