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Garden Rail Road in HO?

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Garden Rail Road in HO?
Posted by cudaken on Tuesday, March 13, 2007 7:21 PM

 This is just a posting out loud, but I kind of like the idea of a outside layout. I have seen some garden layouts on U-Tube and was imnpressed, my yard is much bigger than the garage. Then K-10 trains (LHS) gave me some DVD's to watch (Dream-Plan- Buid). There is a section about doing a Garden Rail Road and it has caught my intrest.

 Pro and Con's, I am guessing O is the way to go but I have a lot of HO stuff now.

 Just find another headach again, Cuda Ken

I hate Rust

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Posted by galaxy on Tuesday, March 13, 2007 8:21 PM

>Pro and Con's, I am guessing O is the way to go but I have a lot of HO stuff now.<

 

From this statement I don't know if you are aware that there is a scale for outdoors garden trains. G scale.LGB(I guess they are/have gone out of business), Aristocrat Bachmann and others make various G scale size trains.

There is a guy on here who did put his O scale trains outside. I guess you could put HO outside if you want, the biggest thing is that everything else will be ginormous compared to the trains and buildings.

Hop on over to the Garden Railways forum right here, and see who's there, gather info. I plan on a garden railway as I have a pond set up and such to put one in, but I hope to be moving this year. I will only put up temporary, and have purchased a plastic G scale battery train. Many die-hard G scalers would gasp at that, but it was cheap, and gets me started without lots of investment before moving!!!Wink [;)]

 

-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 tomikawaTT on Tuesday, March 13, 2007 10:28 PM

First, a couple of definitions:

  • Outdoor.  Located where exposure to real sunlight, real rain and way overscale wind comes with the territory.
  • Garden.  Cultivated (or pruned wild) greenery, tended with loving care by a professional or amateur horticulturist.

A garden railway can be ANY scale, but, usually, bigger is better.Cool [8D]

An outdoor railway may or may not be a garden railway.  If any encroaching plant life is either accidental (weeds) or nonexistent, it's still an outdoor layout if exposed to the weather.  The deciding factor will be weather resistance, in which, once again, the larger scales have an edge.Sigh [sigh]

There have been small scale outdoor/garden railways, including at least one (HO, European prototype, IIRC) at Disney World in Florida and several (OO) in the British Isles, a location not noted for model-friendly weather.Smile [:)]

When I first moved to the dessicated desert I experimented with the idea of building my 1:80 scale empire in my foliage-free back yard.  115 degree temperatures, sunlight strong enough to melt an Athearn BB car, raindrops that impacted like bombs (not often, but definitely possible) and straight line winds that scaled out to orbital speed ran me back indoors in a hurry!Sign - Oops [#oops]

FWIW, would a modeler running live steam and real internal combustion in 1:4, 1:8 or 1:12 scale have an outdoor railroad, a garden railroad or just a miniature railroad?  (Before you jump, remember that there is at least one commercially viable public railroad that runs 1:4 scale model locomotives.)Approve [^]

For that matter, does a modeler who builds a shelf railroad in weatherproof display cases attached to his backyard fence have an indoor railway or an outdoor railway?Mischief [:-,]

Chuck (modeling Central Japan in September, 1964 - indoors)

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Posted by Vail and Southwestern RR on Tuesday, March 13, 2007 11:59 PM
I have always been discouraged from trying this is HO.  The first thing that I would think would be necessary would be to protect the track, actually the ties, from the sun.  Here in AZ I see a lot of outdoor plastic pretty much disintegrate.  But I think you could shade it well enough with a bit of effort.  You would have to keep the track meticulously clean, both electrically and leaf, twig, sand, etc. wise.  And you locos and rolling stock would have to live inside.  Other than that, no problem.  I am still sorely tempted......

Jeff But it's a dry heat!

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Posted by John Busby on Wednesday, March 14, 2007 5:25 AM
 cudaken wrote:

 This is just a posting out loud, but I kind of like the idea of a outside layout. I have seen some garden layouts on U-Tube and was imnpressed, my yard is much bigger than the garage. Then K-10 trains (LHS) gave me some DVD's to watch (Dream-Plan- Buid). There is a section about doing a Garden Rail Road and it has caught my intrest.

 Pro and Con's, I am guessing O is the way to go but I have a lot of HO stuff now.

 Just find another headach again, Cuda Ken

Hi cudaken

HO has successfully been done out side.

But my thoughts are don't do it the first rain Vs snail will tell you why YUCK!!!

I would suggest the smallest practical out door scale gauge combination is 32mm "O' scale

regards John

 

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Posted by simon1966 on Wednesday, March 14, 2007 6:37 AM
Ken, last spring (2006 in case yesterdays 72 degrees confused you and made you think spring happened in St. Louis already!) I hauled out East on I70 and took the family to Amish country in Arcola, IL.  Near Arcola there is a small park called Rockome Gardens.  They have a moderate size garden RR.  I fell into conversation with one of the old chaps that runs and maintains the outdoor layout and he explained how it takes them a couple of day or so in right-of-way clearing, track re-aligning and general maintenance to get the thing running again each season.  This is a G scale layout as well.  I have no experience with it, but I would imagine that HO track would suffer mightily in our cold winters and hot summers.

Simon Modelling CB&Q and Wabash See my slowly evolving layout on my picturetrail site http://www.picturetrail.com/simontrains and our videos at http://www.youtube.com/user/MrCrispybake?feature=mhum

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Posted by cudaken on Wednesday, March 14, 2007 10:48 AM

 Yep Simon it seems spring is here in St Louis but I know it's not here yet.

 One of the reasons I was toying with the idea was to combine RR and Gardening. Last year I let the yard go to heck, just keept it cut. This year I hope to do some planting, maybe plant some rails as well.

 Thanks for the help folks and may bug the people in the Garden section.

                            Cuda Ken

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Posted by cacole on Wednesday, March 14, 2007 8:52 PM

HO outdoors is a topic that seems to come up at least monthly on the Garden Railways forum, and sometimes here.  Yes, it can be done, and many people in England seem to do it; however, there are some things that must be taken into consideration.

First, those who do it probably elevate their track above ground level.  Imagine what a cricket or beetle on the track would do to an HO scale model that ran into it; or a leaf laying across the rails.  They would probably be enough to cause a derailment.

And then there's the weather and other environmental factors that must be taken into account.  I have a G-scale layout in my back yard, and have heard people with G-scale outdoor railroads in the Phoenix, Arizona area say that the rail gets so hot that it can melt plastic wheels in the summertime, so I can just imagine what it would do to HO scale crossties or any plastic rolling stock.

Peco of England makes a UV resistant HO scale track for outdoor use, but Atlas and other brands of HO track in the U.S. have no ultraviolet inhibitors in them like the G-scale track designed to be used outdoors.  I think the plastic crossties would quickly disintegrate in full sunlight, and I wouldn't dare leave a piece of plastic rolling stock outdoors.

If you want to see if HO can survive outdoors, just put a piece of flextrack and a cheap boxcar outdoors for a couple of months and see what happens to them.

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Posted by Jetrock on Thursday, March 15, 2007 11:44 AM

If you're really looking for a challenge, why not HOn30 in a window box?

 

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Posted by G Paine on Thursday, March 15, 2007 1:27 PM
 cacole wrote:

those who do it probably elevate their track above ground level.

Even posts can be a problem. A friend of mine has a G garden RR with the track set on posts. This Maine winter, the frost got to the posts, pushed them out of the ground, and threw the track all out of alignment. He has a bunch of work before he can get running this spring.

George In Midcoast Maine, 'bout halfway up the Rockland branch 

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Posted by Metro Red Line on Thursday, March 15, 2007 2:25 PM

HO might be good for a bonsai garden :)

 

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Posted by Jared on Friday, March 16, 2007 3:48 PM

I like that idea, but woudn't the plants look like giant and weird looking trees, just the plants on Honey, I shrunk the Kids? if you use HO it will look like that, I'd find a local hobby shop and ask if they've even done an O gauge layout, there is a local hobby shop in Huntsville that has an O gauge layout and they have a train room, were different people can bribe this place to let them set up their sets there, or they can pay to set them up here, but i would go to a place that has a "train room" or something like that and look there

P.S. that place in Huntsville is Southerland Station, southerlandstation.com

presidant of U.P. in fayetteville TN! (now if I can just get started!)

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