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Model Railroad Name

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Model Railroad Name
Posted by trainman251 on Sunday, September 9, 2012 1:28 PM

Could anyone here help me come up with a name for my model railroad? I'm new to this and im getting ready to build my very first layout but i can't think of a good name to get started with. 

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Posted by steinjr on Sunday, September 9, 2012 1:32 PM

 How about giving us at least a tiny hint about what type of railroad, what type of location and what era you are trying to model?

 Smile,
 Stein

 

 

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Posted by richhotrain on Sunday, September 9, 2012 1:37 PM

How about the No Name & Y Knot R.R. ?   Laugh

 

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Posted by galaxy on Sunday, September 9, 2012 3:12 PM

What kind of name would you like?

You could: name it after the towns/area it serves...for example the Owego Harford Railroad {Real 1:1 RR}serves the towns of Owego at interconnect up to the town of Harford in Upstate New York {The OH RR}, or the "Rubber Lake and Western Railroad" {The RL& W RR} .

You could: name it after yoursef and your wife, or your two children's names, or the like....such as "the Gracie and Allen Classic Railroad" {G&AC RR}, or the "Mary and Harry Rail lines"{M&H RL}.

You COUld: name it something "cute"...such as the "Gorre and Dephetid" {G&D RR}{pronounced Gorry and defeated}, or a steam run named the "Grimey Black and Sooty Railroad" {The GB&S RR}, Or even the "Diesel Fumes Will Choke'em RailRoad{DFWCRR}.

Or you create some other "backstory" to why your RR exists and name it from there...Like  " John Smith traveled from England in 1878  to the Mid west where he took posession of a large tract of 200000 acres of land West of the small town of  PrairieVille, Kansas. He decided that as the major railroad expanded through PrairieVille, they would need an area to service their locomotives, so he petitioned the RR to consider his tract of land for a roundhouse. He was granted charter to do so, and the Junction at Smithville Flats was constructed. The connecting rail line between PrairieVille and the ROundhouse area became known as the "PrairieVille, Smithville Flats and Western RR" { THe P,SF& W RR}

Geeked

-G .

Just my thoughts, ideas, opinions and experiences. Others may vary.

 HO and N Scale.

After long and careful thought, they have convinced me. I have come to the conclusion that they are right. The aliens did it.

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Posted by cuyama on Sunday, September 9, 2012 3:21 PM

Is this the plan you are talking about?

In July I think you were talking about an HO 4X8. If built in roughly 4X6 to 4X8, this plan looks like N scale based on a quick "eyeball" of  the radii, grades, and clearances -- and I think the original may have been an N scale plan representing Japan. The structures and streets as shown are pretty small for the US Midwest in HO (if you are looking at roughly 4X8), so you may not be able to fit all that is illustrated.

Not to mention that the track configuration, with significant station platforms and a lot of elevation change, does not look much like the stereotypical US Midwest (although of course there are hilly areas also) .

It's usually not optimal to take a plan designed for a very different concept (and perhaps even a different scale) and apply it directly to something else. These might be issues to clarify before starting the project (or naming it).

Good luck.

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Posted by trainman251 on Sunday, September 9, 2012 3:41 PM

yes its an n scale layout, i thought it might fit in somewhere in the US the way everything is made up and it is a 4x6 may just have to think of a name based on surroundings and other railroads.

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Posted by tgindy on Sunday, September 9, 2012 4:03 PM

Perhaps a few of us can explain how we named our model railroads.

Example:  (the free-lanced) CR&T = Conemaugh Road & Traction.  Thus, knowing your geographic locale, but also the year(s) to be modeled is quite helpful.  CR&T layout's 2 major industries are coal, and passenger service.  Know what you can do in your available layout space (why CR&T is N Scale).

CR&T answers 2 questions:  What if the Pennsylvania had completed electrification from Harrisburg to Pittsburgh, and; what if the traction in the Conemaugh Valley was more than PCCs (for passenger service).

* Conemaugh:  Inspired by the actual Conemaugh River Valley (in Western PA).

* Traction:  Primarily interurban + short-haul freight.

* Road:  Expansion to use small diesel, and perhaps a subway division.

* Circa 1956:  Provides maximum flexibility of motive power (PCC, box motor, diesel switcher, etc.), and use of shorter 40'/50' freight cars.  1956 also lends itself for CR&T to interchange with the Pennsy (using GG1, diesel, Broadway Limited, steam, etc.).  Note that 1957 was PRR's steam to diesel conversion year.

Conemaugh Road & Traction circa 1956

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Posted by Lehigh Valley 2089 on Sunday, September 9, 2012 6:25 PM

Me? The Barclay, Towanda & Susquehanna. Mainly the influence was from it's location. The railroad runs by Barclay Mt. and it's ghost town as it goes south to Forksville in Sullivan County. Towanda is it's central location, and follows the Susquehanna river to Wyalusing,which is to the southeast of Towanda in Bradford County, Pennsylvania.

The line then goes northeast, and was once aiming to build to Binghamton, New York, but was abandoned when the railroad came under the power of the Lehigh Valley Railroad. It's northeastern leg now only goes to Friendsville in Susquehanna County (when the Valley took full control of the railroad, most of the original system's track went back to nature). 

The western leg of the line went as far west as Troy, with plans to continue to Mansfield in Tioga County (these plans died with the system). A western leg went to Canton to provide more interchange income for the railroad. 

Trackage rights were granted to the BT&S over the LVRR to Sayre so the line can service it's locomotives. 

The system's main source of income? Lumber and interchange traffic between the LVRR, Wabash and PB&E (Pittsburgh, Binghamton and Eastern. In real life, it failed, but I revived it to get more traffic for my railroad). 

Era? 1963

 

The Lehigh Valley Railroad, the Route of the Black Diamond Express, John Wilkes and Maple Leaf.

-Jake, modeling the Barclay, Towanda & Susquehanna.

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Posted by Texas Zepher on Sunday, September 9, 2012 8:30 PM

As the others have said or implied, the "type" of railroad might be most import part of the name.   If your layout is pretending to be part of a great big railroad then it will have a very different name than if it is pretending to be a short-line or regional railroad.  From the track plan I would guess it is not a mining/logging/or industrial railroad.

In the time period you specified prototype class 1 railroads are things with noble sounding names or far away places in them:

Atlantic & Pacific
Union Pacific
Northern Pacific
Atchison Topeka & Santa Fe  (Santa Fe was on the edge of forever at the time).
St. Louis & San Francisco  (Mississippi to the coast)

Short Lines are often named by the end points or major towns they serve:

Louisville & Wadley
Bellfast & Moosehead

Regionals go in between those two extremes:

Colorado & Wyoming
Wisconsin Central

So if we got a flavor for what type of railroad you are going for, we could be much more help

FYI

My club's transcon is Platte Valley & Western
My regional railroad is Pine Ridge & North River
My short line/industiral is Pikes Peak, Fossil Creek & Tesla
My final "real" model railroad is going to be the Pueblo and Arkansas River Valley.  A subsidiary of the AT&SF.

 

Elmwood, Olatha & Cleveland?

 

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Posted by tomikawaTT on Monday, September 10, 2012 3:42 AM

A handy tool kit for assembling reasonably believable railroad names:

  1. Someplace and someplace else - end points, names can come from a map, a family history or an overactive imagination:  Pittsburgh and Lake Erie, Smith Corners and Johnson City, Gorre and Daphetid, Moonlight and Violins (no lie!!!)
  2. Someplace direction, with or without and:  Norfolk and Western, Norfolk Southern, Elgin, Joliet and Eastern, (Name) Northern...
  3. Geographic feature, singular or plural:  Hudson River, Green Mountain, Chesapeake (Bay) and Ohio (River).  My freelance coal hauler translates as Wealth River Valley Iron Road, while one narrow gauge feeder is the Spring Mountain Electric Railway.
  4. Names honoring family members.  Mobyston, Cedsville and Nicksburg could have been named in honor of the male children of a DDG blonde science fiction character of my acquaintance.  My Kashimoto Forest Railway (a logger) bears my wife's maiden name.

Just a few ideas, off the top of my head.

Chuck (Modeling Central Japan in September, 1964)

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Posted by MisterBeasley on Monday, September 10, 2012 6:49 AM

Railroads have always tried to follow the path of least resistance, so they stick to the shores of lakes and rivers whenever possible to have the most level possible route.  So, rivers, lakes and other bodies of water are appropriate.  I named my town Moose Bay.  I run Milwaukee equipment, but the trolleys are painted with the Moose Bay Transit Authority scheme.

I've always been partial to Native American names, too.  I would look for one from the area where you are modeling.  Use either a tribal name, or perhaps a "heritage" name for some geographical feature or place.

It takes an iron man to play with a toy iron horse. 

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Posted by Jumijo on Monday, September 10, 2012 10:47 AM

Keep in mind that the latest fad in naming one's model railroad is to add the word subdivison at the end. Evidently, you're not a "really serious" model railroader until you do so.

Modeling the Baltimore waterfront in HO scale

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Posted by cuyama on Monday, September 10, 2012 11:45 AM

Jumijo
Keep in mind that the latest fad in naming one's model railroad is to add the word subdivison at the end. Evidently, you're not a "really serious" model railroader until you do so.

I don't find that to be "a fad" at all. "Subdivision" was used on many real-life railroads, so often it's just following the real thing. I'm puzzled -- why would you denigrate modelers following the real world?

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Posted by joe323 on Monday, September 10, 2012 11:58 AM
It was really very simple to name my railroad. I was driving on the West Shore Expressway of Staten Island when I noticed a string of orange refuse cars waiting to pick up New York City trash and haul it to landfills in south carolina. So the Staten Island West hauls among other things lot of trash out and brings coal in to a local power plant also off the expressway. There is no real railroad with the SIW name but it is loosly based on real operations.

Joe Staten Island West 

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Posted by lifeontheranch on Monday, September 10, 2012 12:21 PM

I went a conventional route - end points and the place between. LK&O RR is the Lapeer, Kitzmiller, and Ohio railroad. Lapeer MI is the northern end point, Kitzmiller MD is the southern end point. The entire state of Ohio lay in between. Hence, LK&O. Three prototype locations, one from each state, condensed into one freelanced model railroad.

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Posted by tomikawaTT on Monday, September 10, 2012 2:02 PM

Jumijo

Keep in mind that the latest fad in naming one's model railroad is to add the word subdivison at the end. Evidently, you're not a "really serious" model railroader until you do so.

That, "Fad," was common on the Santa Fe long before it was devoured by that mountain goat on steroids.  If your prototype had, `Subs,' it's easy to add a fictional `sub' to the route map of your 1:1 scale prototype.  Just don't name it the Back Bedroom Sub...

As far as being a, "Really serious model railroader," the Moonlight and Violins referenced above was owned by George Allen.  It was the subject of a Model Railroader series, `50,000 Spikes.'  His later Tuxedo Junction filled a barn.

Since I model a secondary mainline (Chuo-Nishi Hon-Sen) under a fictional name, I guess I'm not a serious model railroader, even with very close to 75 years' seniority in the hobby.  [The JNR has Sen (routes,) not Subs.]

Chuck (Modeling Central Japan in September, 1964)

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Posted by el-capitan on Monday, September 10, 2012 3:07 PM

Jumijo

Keep in mind that the latest fad in naming one's model railroad is to add the word subdivison at the end. Evidently, you're not a "really serious" model railroader until you do so.

I'm operating a branch of the atsf between Rincon and Silver City, NM which the ATSF railroad labelled  the "Deming Subdivision". What should I call it if not the Deming subdivision?
See, this isn't a fad, it's prototypical modeling. An example of a fad would be to add a third rail where the actual railroad never had one just because everyone else is doing it.

 Check out the Deming Sub by clicking on the pics:

Deming Sub Deming Sub

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Posted by bearman on Monday, September 10, 2012 4:56 PM

Mine is the Maricopa & Gila River RR set in 1950's Arizona south of Phoenix in Pinal County.  There is a real Maricopa and the Gila River runs near the place.  However, there is no yard in Maricopa, the M&GR has the Maricopa yard.  There is also no meat packing plant in Maricopa, there is one in Tolleson, but Butterfield Station on the M&GR boasts of a packing plant and a freight house.  There was a real Butterfield which was a watering stop on the Butterfield stage line back in the day.  There is also a food cannery in S. Maricopa.  To my knowledge there was never a S. Maricopa. Hey, but I am having fun.

Bear "It's all about having fun."

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Posted by wjstix on Monday, September 10, 2012 5:02 PM

cuyama

Jumijo
Keep in mind that the latest fad in naming one's model railroad is to add the word subdivison at the end. Evidently, you're not a "really serious" model railroader until you do so.

I don't find that to be "a fad" at all. "Subdivision" was used on many real-life railroads, so often it's just following the real thing. I'm puzzled -- why would you denigrate modelers following the real world?

I think the issue is that it's not really the name of a railroad. That is, what people seem to do now is they say their layout is the Freeport & Northern. OK, why do all the engines say "Union Pacific" and not "Freeport & Northern"?? Oh, well, it's really the Freeport & Northern division (or subdivision) of the UP. The F&N was bought by the UP in 1947, and my layout is set in 1990.

Which is fine, but what you're doing is modelling a free-lanced branchline or section of a real railroad, the U.P. It's not the same as creating your own railroad, with a unique name, paint scheme, etc.

Stix
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Posted by trainman251 on Monday, September 10, 2012 7:46 PM
Thanks for all the replies I'll tell you a little but about where I live. I live in Mississippi in what is considered to be the Mississippi river valley and the area I live in is called the Delta. The IC used to run here years ago but now the only railroad around is Columbus and Greenville. I would like a name with subdivision but my route does not model a real railroad. Even though it's from a Japanese forum, I would like it to have an American name. P.S. i am thinking about changing the stations to rail yards and adding some more in some where else.
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Posted by dante on Monday, September 10, 2012 9:47 PM

Depending on location:  Delta Central; Delta Northern; Delta Southern; Delta Western; Delta Eastern (or vice-versa).

Dante

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Posted by cuyama on Monday, September 10, 2012 11:34 PM

trainman251
i am thinking about changing the stations to rail yards and adding some more in some where else.

In that case, this may not be the right plan with which to begin, as it doesn't really match what you want to accomplish, but good luck.

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Posted by wjstix on Tuesday, September 11, 2012 8:58 AM

trainman251
Thanks for all the replies I'll tell you a little but about where I live. I live in Mississippi in what is considered to be the Mississippi river valley and the area I live in is called the Delta. The IC used to run here years ago but now the only railroad around is Columbus and Greenville. I would like a name with subdivision but my route does not model a real railroad. Even though it's from a Japanese forum, I would like it to have an American name. P.S. i am thinking about changing the stations to rail yards and adding some more in some where else.

Just to make sure we're all on the same page, "subdivision" isn't part of a railroad's name. Larger railroads are broken down into divisions, and larger divisions may be broken down into subdivisions. It's all still the same railroad.

In the past, model railroaders who made up their own free-lanced railroad names usually just said they were modelling that railroad. Someone modelling a real railroad, but a free-lanced area of the railroad, were say they were modelling a 'fictional brancline" of the real railroad. In recent years, that seems to have been replaced by saying they're modelling the "XXX subdivision" of a real railroad.

Stix
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Posted by dstarr on Tuesday, September 11, 2012 2:33 PM

trainman251

Could anyone here help me come up with a name for my model railroad? I'm new to this and im getting ready to build my very first layout but i can't think of a good name to get started with. 

The prototype railroad names had some favorite patterns.

Here and There Railroad.   eg Boston and Maine, Baltimore and Ohio, Boston and Albany. 

Here, There, and Everywhere Railroad,  eg New York, New Haven, and Hartford. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe.

Both of these choices pretty much demand that your layout have a "Here" and a "There" with rail service.

Someplace Central   eg New York Central, Illinois Central. 

Someplace RR     eg Pennsylvania RR, Erie RR, Lehigh Valley RR.

Someplace Pacific     eg Union Pacific, Southern Pacific, Northern Pacific, Western Pacific Canadian Pacific.

Sell-the-Stock RR   eg Seaboard Air Line which sold a lot of stock in the 1920's until investors wised up to the fact that it was just a steam railroad, not a real airline.

When creating a name, give some thought to the pleasantness of the abbreviation, which you may want to decal on your rolling stock, and to the reporting mark.  

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Posted by wjstix on Tuesday, September 11, 2012 4:35 PM

Also cities were more common than states, and usually followed a direction of travel (often east to west). Like a railroad serving New York, Chicago and Kansas City; they would probably put the cities in that order in their name - "New York, Chicago & Kansas City RR" - not "Chicago, Kansas City & New York RR".

In the 1850's, Congress mapped out several possible routes for the transcontinental route to the west coast. The one that was chosen was the one thru the middle of the west, called the Central Pacific (which eventually became the Union Pacific railroad.) The route to the north became the Northern Pacific, and the southerly route became the Southern Pacific.

Many small railroads dreamed of being transcontinentals, so a number of midwestern railroads added "& Pacific" at the end of their name. Many never came close to the Pacific...in fact quite a few railroads didn't serve all the cities in their name. The "Frisco" (St.Louis - San Francisco) never got close to California, just as the Minneapolis & St.Louis never reached Missouri.

dstarr

Stock RR   eg Seaboard Air Line which sold a lot of stock in the 1920's until investors wised up to the fact that it was just a steam railroad, not a real airline.

Actually "air line" was a 19th century term for a very straight, fast railroad line. The Seaboard Air Line name goes back before airplanes were invented.

Stix
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Posted by Lehigh Valley 2089 on Tuesday, September 11, 2012 6:23 PM

wjstix

Many small railroads dreamed of being transcontinentals, so a number of midwestern railroads added "& Pacific" at the end of their name. Many never came close to the Pacific...in fact quite a few railroads didn't serve all the cities in their name. The "Frisco" (St.Louis - San Francisco) never got close to California, just as the Minneapolis & St.Louis never reached Missouri.

Don't forget the Midland Continental. I think it was supposed to go from North Dakota to Texas, but never made it out of North Dakota. Correct me if I am wrong. 

Another example of this is the Susquehanna & New York. It actually made it as far as Marsh Hill Junction, and had trackage rights to Williamsport over the Pennsy. It made an attempt for Binghamton, but never made it. The northern most point was Towanda. 

The Lehigh Valley Railroad, the Route of the Black Diamond Express, John Wilkes and Maple Leaf.

-Jake, modeling the Barclay, Towanda & Susquehanna.

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Posted by lifeontheranch on Tuesday, September 11, 2012 7:20 PM

The Akron, Canton & Youngstown railroad in its 70 year existence never made it to Canton or Youngstown even though both cities were less than 50 miles from Akron.

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Posted by trainman251 on Tuesday, September 11, 2012 7:48 PM

well does anyone have a 4x8 either n or ho scale layout plan that has a freight line and a city along with it?

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Posted by jguess733 on Tuesday, September 11, 2012 8:21 PM

I stumbled across mine one day while looking at 1960's street maps of Fort Worth.  I noticed that the Texas & Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association had their headquarters building annotated on the map and I thought to myself "that would make a great railroad name." So Texas and Southwestern it was.  Since then though I've shifted to modeling the Fort Worth & Denver.  However I plan on having a few freelanced TSW trains role through on trackage rights.

Jason

Modeling the Fort Worth & Denver of the early 1970's in N scale

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