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Need advice in dismantling layout for a move to Montana.

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Need advice in dismantling layout for a move to Montana.
Posted by sfcouple on Friday, September 3, 2010 1:54 PM

Folks this is hard, I'm dismantling my layout for a move to Montana from San Francisco.  I've done the easy part by removing trees and structures...now the track and turnouts.  I used a thin layer of liquid nails to attach the track work to blue foam and diluted white glue for the ballast...any ideas on how to save the track?  Particularly the turnouts? 

Someone told us that the winter temperatures might be colder in Montana than San Francisco but the only difference I can see in the temperature readings is just have a silly minus sign in front.  I figure a long sleeve shirt and maybe a jacket is all I'll need to keep warm.  Confused

Wayne

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Posted by MisterBeasley on Friday, September 3, 2010 2:01 PM

Do you need to remove the track, or can you just transport the layout as as, possibly by cutting it in a few places?  With a little protection, the blue foam should hold up pretty well to a move.

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Posted by sfcouple on Friday, September 3, 2010 2:12 PM

I'll be making a new layout  (larger) with a totally different track plan.  So, I'll have to completely remove the trackwork from the foam, if possible.   

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Posted by R. T. POTEET on Friday, September 3, 2010 2:18 PM

sfcouple
Someone told us that the winter temperatures might be colder in Montana than San Francisco but the only difference I can see in the temperature readings is just have a silly minus sign in front.  I figure a long sleeve shirt and maybe a jacket is all I'll need to keep warm.  Confused

You get a hearty "HE-HE-HE-HE-HE" outta me on this one. San Francisco has an absolutely salubrious climate compared to Montana particlularly out on the plains where minus 40 degree temps ain't unusual.

All those northern plains states are cold--remember there ain't nuttin' between you and the North Pole but a barbed wire fence--but Montana might just be the coldest of the bunch; when I worked up there in the '50s one of my chores was to get up in the morning and make sure that the ice was broken up on the watering troughs . . . . . . . . . . in the middle of July! Please advise me just where you are moving to; people who ignore that "silly minus sign" usually wind up freezing their patootie off!; it's a lotta fun to watch!

I have no idea what is prompting you to move from Taxifornia to Montana--I don't wanna go feedin' off my range--but let me be perfectly honest: I hail from eastern Idaho and I'd sure rather live in Montana than in the Golden State! I'd also sure rather live in Montana than Arizona. COME ON LOTTERY!

If you used white glue to secure your ballast then you MIGHT just be able to salvage your track by soaking your ballast in water which should loosen the ballast. Try soaking a towel, wring the dripping water out of it, and lay it atop your track. Then set something heavy atop the towels to instill squeezing the water out. It may take more than one application but it should work.

On my last layout I white glued the ballast around my scratchbuilt Code 55 switches and I did manage to get them up . . . . . . . . . . I don't remember how many soakings it took but they eventually came loose. My wooden ties were warped and had to be discarded but the frogs and points of the switches were salvaged.

Rotsaruck!

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Posted by galaxy on Friday, September 3, 2010 2:26 PM

sfcouple

I'll be making a new layout  (larger) with a totally different track plan.  So, I'll have to completely remove the trackwork from the foam, if possible.   

If you mounted it directly to foam, you might just be able to use a sharp knife like a razor knife and cut the tracks right  out of and off the foam with a thin strip of foam underneath the tracks and all....then soak the track to loosen any adhesives and remaining foam bits as suggested above.

Just my thoughts. Others may vary.

-G .

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

 HO and N Scale.

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Posted by mokenarr on Friday, September 3, 2010 2:26 PM

when i moved from Illinois to Arizona i tried removing the switches by doing as already said by soaking them with water.  was only sorta successful , so after a bit just gave up.   funny thing also the ones i saved proved to be problems later anyway.

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Posted by sfcouple on Friday, September 3, 2010 2:33 PM

We're moving to Red Lodge.  Was just there the other day and asked someone what the electrical plug sticking out of radiator was for?  He looked at me and said: "Where are you from?"  San Francisco says I.  He rolls his eyes and said son (I'm 65) you got a lot to learn....the plug is used to heat the engine so it might start in the morning.  Guess this will be an interesting winter for us.  

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Posted by sfcouple on Friday, September 3, 2010 2:34 PM

Thanks for all the help, I'll start soaking the trackwork tonight and hope for the best.

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Posted by MisterBeasley on Friday, September 3, 2010 2:35 PM

"New" and particularly "Larger" are good words.

How many turnouts are you talking about?  I have limited experience with removing track, confined to small re-configurations on the same layout.  I found that the flex track I put down wasn't likely to flex as well after I took it up again.  Salvage would not have been worth the effort, although I'll probably remove the ties and rust up the rail sections as pieces of scenery to place alongside the right-of-way.

If you've got a dozen or more high-end turnouts, it's going to be worth developing a technique to get them up.  Unfortunately, Liquid Nails is pretty unforgiving stuff.  Of course, if you've followed most of the advice I've heard here, you've got very little adhesive under the working parts of the turnout, so that should work to your advantage.  On the other hand, if you've got a half-dozen snap switches, the effort involved in getting them up might not be worth price of replacement.

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

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Posted by sfcouple on Friday, September 3, 2010 2:41 PM

I have 6 Walther/Shinohara code 83 turnouts and one wye.  However, when laying the turnouts I was very stingy with the adhesive in the event it had to be moved one day.  I'll try the soaking for a few days and see what happens.  

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Posted by MisterBeasley on Friday, September 3, 2010 2:44 PM

sfcouple
  Was just there the other day and asked someone what the electrical plug sticking out of radiator was for?  

I spent a short time at the Air Force base in Thule, Greenland.  While I was there, the annual memo came out stating that as of that date it was mandatory for all vehicles to be plugged in when they were left not running, even for only a short time.  The date was September 1st.  The last sunset would come a month or so later, and it would be dark for the rest of the long winter.

Nothing between you and the Norh Pole but a barbed wire fence?  Well, up there, there was no fence, just 400 more miles of ice.

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

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Posted by sfcouple on Friday, September 3, 2010 2:52 PM

Mr. B....my uncle was a former base commander at Thule:  Col. Melvin R. Schultz.  Curious if you knew him?  He was also base commander at Castle AFB in California and one in Louisiana near Shreveport whose name escapes me at the moment.  

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Posted by R. T. POTEET on Friday, September 3, 2010 3:03 PM

sfcouple

We're moving to Red Lodge.  Was just there the other day and asked someone what the electrical plug sticking out of radiator was for?  He looked at me and said: "Where are you from?"  San Francisco says I.  He rolls his eyes and said son (I'm 65) you got a lot to learn....the plug is used to heat the engine so it might start in the morning.  Guess this will be an interesting winter for us.  

sfcouple

We're moving to Red Lodge.  Was just there the other day and asked someone what the electrical plug sticking out of radiator was for?  He looked at me and said: "Where are you from?"  San Francisco says I.  He rolls his eyes and said son (I'm 65) you got a lot to learn....the plug is used to heat the engine so it might start in the morning.  Guess this will be an interesting winter for us.  

I pulled into West Yellowstone at about 9 in the morning on New Years Day, 1958. Everyone was wearing ski masks except for us rookies from Eastern Idaho where the temps usually didn't get below 35 below and all the vehicles in town were running to keep the coolant from freezing up.. Unofficially the temp had gotten to minus 62 in the night . . . . . that is unofficial because the almanac says that the official low temp is minus 54. My boss out at Forsythe had purchased about eight  WWII era jeeps which we used for various tasks around the spread; we kept anti-freeze to 35 below. When the weather forecast called for temps below 30 degrees we'd "fill-em and run-em" We could idle out almost a half a tank of gas between sundown and sunrise. 

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Posted by R. T. POTEET on Friday, September 3, 2010 3:11 PM

sfcouple

Mr. B....my uncle was a former base commander at Thule:  Col. Melvin R. Schultz.  Curious if you knew him?  He was also base commander at Castle AFB in California and one in Louisiana near Shreveport whose name escapes me at the moment.  

Try Bergstrom Air Force Patch!

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Posted by MisterBeasley on Friday, September 3, 2010 4:02 PM

sfcouple

Mr. B....my uncle was a former base commander at Thule:  Col. Melvin R. Schultz.  Curious if you knew him?  He was also base commander at Castle AFB in California and one in Louisiana near Shreveport whose name escapes me at the moment.  

 

I was only there for a few weeks, working on the radar, and we didn't interact with the Air Force guys much.  So, unless he was there in September of 1986, we didn't overlap.

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

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Posted by cowman on Friday, September 3, 2010 4:43 PM

Sorry to hear you are having to tear down a layout, but do hope your new improved one will be fun to build and give you much pleasure.  (You will have plenty of time to work on it in the winters.)

If you layed your track directly on the foam, I have heard that a putty knife works well to seperate it, though as Mr B said Liquid Nails is rugged stuff.  However, you could tear up the foam a little, then sand the foam off the bottom of the ties.  If you want to reuse the foam either use the other side or fill the damage with your choice of filler, sculpta mold, spackle, etc.

I spent a year and a half in Montana in the AF, enjoyed it, but already knew what the little plug was for.  From there I went to Thule where every building had a row of extension cords hanging in the parking spots.  Sure wish I had been back in the hobby then.  Lots of time to work on things when the horizon doesn't even glow for several months. 

Keep warm, 

 

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Posted by widetrack on Friday, September 3, 2010 5:40 PM

Hi sfcouple

take it from someone who has moved way too many times in the past 27 years, unless your track is Walthers/Shinohara or some other high dollar equivelint its not worth the time. If your like me and used flextrack on the last three that I did, I just pulled it up with a small flat prybar called a wonderbar and used new track the next time I was ready to "play". However it is always possible to salvage anything if you work at it long enough and the above posts are very good advice. I've used the soak method on a few high end turnouts that I needed to save and it works pretty good.   Goodd luck on your move to Montana and keep us posted on your new layout.   Neil        

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Posted by mobilman44 on Friday, September 3, 2010 6:02 PM

Hi!

You are in for a serious living and culture shock!  Not bad, but you will find everything very different from what you are probably used to.  I urge you to do your best to fit in, and refrain from using the phrase "In San Francisco, we did it .......".  I guarantee you no one will care.

Regarding the railroad, I would get a good putty knife and scrape the track off the foam.  It will probably be quite a while until you have time to put together a new layout, and you can deal with cleaning up the trackage - or dumping it - at that time.

By the way, I STRONGLY urge you to start using Mobil 1 in your autos (and all other motorized stuff like snowmobiles, snow throwers, etc.  While you will still have the need for a block heater, it won't be anywhere near as often as compared to using a petroleum based oil.  Yes, I worked for Mobil (retired from ExxonMobil) and that may make me sound biased, but I was a witness to the Mobil 1 tests back in the early '70s at the research labs, and the results were amazing.

 

ENJOY  !

 

Mobilman44

 

Living in southeast Texas, formerly modeling the "postwar" Santa Fe and Illinois Central 

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Posted by sfcouple on Friday, September 3, 2010 6:18 PM

Thanks Mobileman...I plan on changing the oil before driving back and was wondering what to use.  Your help is really appreciated.  

We've spent some time there and it is fun watching people react when I say we're from San Francisco...most are very nice and polite and we just sort of joke about it.  They usually ask: "why are you moving here?"  Peace, quiet, small town, friendly people, low cost of living,  and we can actually afford to purchase a home.  We've been there in the winter and have a rough idea of what we're up against.      

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Posted by sfcouple on Saturday, September 4, 2010 10:22 AM

Thanks for all the help...so far the soaking technique with removing a thin layer of foam beneath the turnouts seems to be working.  But the flex track is toast.  

Fortunately the Sievers Benchwork will all be salvaged as it is just bolted and screwed together.  

Wayne

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Posted by cudaken on Sunday, September 5, 2010 4:49 PM

 Wayne, good luck with the move. I just looked for a smiley face freezing it butt off, but there are none. If it not to late, try running a hack saw blade (not the whole saw) between the ties and the roadbed. That should cut the liquid nails. What is left on the ties, sand off with around 120 grit paper.

 By the way, where will the layout be? Hopefully in the furnaces room.

             Cuda Ken 

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Posted by sfcouple on Sunday, September 5, 2010 5:49 PM

Thanks cudaken....I did manage to get the turnouts removed in one piece, soaked them in water overnight while they were still on the layout.  They were then removed, along with some of the foam, with a knife---your idea of a hack saw probably would have worked better.  

The layout will probably be in the basement in an insulated room right next to the furnace.  Gonna be a new experience for me, living in Montana and having my own railroad room.  

My layout has now been totally dismantled and carefully packed in boxes waiting to head east.  Took 2 years to build and 2 days to tear apart.  

Wayne 

 

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Posted by cudaken on Sunday, September 5, 2010 5:56 PM

 Sorry I was late, I thought this was the same post I answered some time ago.

 Any shoots of the old layout you care to share Wayne? We like pictures!

            Ken

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Posted by sfcouple on Sunday, September 5, 2010 7:31 PM

Ken,

Here is a photo of my one and only engine house taken before scenery was anywhere near completed..  Bachmann Shay backing in (or moving out).  

 

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Posted by rrebell on Monday, September 6, 2010 11:54 AM

R. T. POTEET

 sfcouple:
Someone told us that the winter temperatures might be colder in Montana than San Francisco but the only difference I can see in the temperature readings is just have a silly minus sign in front.  I figure a long sleeve shirt and maybe a jacket is all I'll need to keep warm.  Confused

You get a hearty "HE-HE-HE-HE-HE" outta me on this one. San Francisco has an absolutely salubrious climate compared to Montana particlularly out on the plains where minus 40 degree temps ain't unusual.

All those northern plains states are cold--remember there ain't nuttin' between you and the North Pole but a barbed wire fence--but Montana might just be the coldest of the bunch; when I worked up there in the '50s one of my chores was to get up in the morning and make sure that the ice was broken up on the watering troughs . . . . . . . . . . in the middle of July! Please advise me just where you are moving to; people who ignore that "silly minus sign" usually wind up freezing their patootie off!; it's a lotta fun to watch!

I have no idea what is prompting you to move from Taxifornia to Montana--I don't wanna go feedin' off my range--but let me be perfectly honest: I hail from eastern Idaho and I'd sure rather live in Montana than in the Golden State! I'd also sure rather live in Montana than Arizona. COME ON LOTTERY!

If you used white glue to secure your ballast then you MIGHT just be able to salvage your track by soaking your ballast in water which should loosen the ballast. Try soaking a towel, wring the dripping water out of it, and lay it atop your track. Then set something heavy atop the towels to instill squeezing the water out. It may take more than one application but it should work.

On my last layout I white glued the ballast around my scratchbuilt Code 55 switches and I did manage to get them up . . . . . . . . . . I don't remember how many soakings it took but they eventually came loose. My wooden ties were warped and had to be discarded but the frogs and points of the switches were salvaged.

Rotsaruck!

Not to hijack your thread but I prefer California to the colder places but then I live in the bay area with winter highs in the high 50's and lows in the 40's. Used to live back east and summers were too hot and winters got to - 5, I can't imagine -40.

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Posted by Geared Steam on Monday, September 6, 2010 3:25 PM

Born and raised in Montana, it was a great place to live until the out-of staters started moving in.

Seriously, east of the Rockies the snow falls horizontal, and you can freeze your butt off. In the Rockies, the snow falls vertical but the temps aren't too bad.

Somebody already mentioned to never EVER say to anyone "Well back in _____ we used to do it this way" This is the best advice you have received, live by it.

 

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Posted by sfcouple on Monday, September 6, 2010 4:54 PM

Geared Steam,

"Somebody already mentioned to never EVER say to anyone "Well back in _____ we used to do it this way" This is the best advice you have received, live by it."

This is excellent advice and will be followed at all times---I promise. ! 

Moving to Montana is almost like moving back to the USA I used to know.  We've spent a fair amount of time in Montana and have yet to press '1' for english.  I could go on and on but some of my comments would not be politically correct so I'll just say we are really looking forward to living in Montana and I wouldn't want to do things the way we do in San Francisco.  This place is really changing and not necessarily for the better.  

I've had to drive a cab here to make ends meet and the stories I could tell would curl your toes.....I look forward to dealing with the cold winter days, working on a model railroad, without having my life threatened by a thug in the back seat of my cab.   Minus 40 will be like a walk in the park...well, almost. Confused

 

 

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Posted by Geared Steam on Monday, September 6, 2010 5:51 PM

sfcouple

Geared Steam,

"Somebody already mentioned to never EVER say to anyone "Well back in _____ we used to do it this way" This is the best advice you have received, live by it."

This is excellent advice and will be followed at all times---I promise. ! 

Moving to Montana is almost like moving back to the USA I used to know.  We've spent a fair amount of time in Montana and have yet to press '1' for english.  I could go on and on but some of my comments would not be politically correct so I'll just say we are really looking forward to living in Montana and I wouldn't want to do things the way we do in San Francisco.  This place is really changing and not necessarily for the better.  

I've had to drive a cab here to make ends meet and the stories I could tell would curl your toes.....I look forward to dealing with the cold winter days, working on a model railroad, without having my life threatened by a thug in the back seat of my cab.   Minus 40 will be like a walk in the park...well, almost. Confused

I'm just jealous, but I will be back someday. Where are you planning to go?  I assume western Montana?  Not many thugs in Montana survive very long so you won't have to be concerned about that, plus you can rail fan the BNSF, MRL and chase after all of the Milwaukee Roads ghosts that are still around. I'm envious!!

 

 

"The true sign of intelligence is not knowledge but imagination."-Albert Einstein

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Posted by sfcouple on Monday, September 6, 2010 6:00 PM

Thanks for the great photos....

We're moving to Red Lodge, we've been there many times and fell in love with the place.  We've even been there in the winter and have a rough idea of what it will be like with snow, wind, and temperatures on the south side of freezing.   

Can't wait to make the move.

 

 

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Posted by zgardner18 on Monday, September 6, 2010 8:22 PM

I don't know much about moving a layout but I know about Montana.  Never been to Red Lodge but I've lived in Bozeman and loved it.  sadly I went to "Taxifornia" to Montana and back to "Taxifornia"  There isn't a day that goes by that I wish I was still up there.  Modeling the MRL is the only thing that helps the pain.  One day I'll be back, one day.  I have heard that Red Lodge is very nice.  Good luck in Montana and if you don't mind could you swing by Los Angeles and fit me into that U-Haul.

--Zak Gardner

My Layout Blog:  http://mrl369dude.blogspot.com

http://zgardner18.rrpicturearchives.net

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