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freelance modelers, what are you modeling?

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freelance modelers, what are you modeling?
Posted by Mr. LMD on Sunday, September 25, 2011 3:59 PM

This is just a general question that some might have asked you or you thought it to yourself.

 

I'm a new N scale modeler after leaving HO (lack of space and desired cars) in search of a better scale to model and build my desired layout.

 

Feel free to talk about to post about your layout.

Mr. LMD, Owner, founder

The Central Chicago & Illinois Railroad

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Posted by Comrad_Durandal on Monday, September 26, 2011 12:02 PM

Mr. LMD

This is just a general question that maybe some has asked you, but I would like to ask myself.

What is the backstory about your layout?

I know I haven't built mine yet, but the premise I'm running with is a Midwestern area where Amtrak is the primary rail carrier, and the freight companies operate leasing lines from THEM.  Besides Amtrak, I figure this would be BNSF, Canadian Pacific, and UP territory so it's open to all.  I am basing the scenery and areas on places I've seen when I rode the train from Yuma,AZ to Portland, OR to Minneapolis, MN via Amtrak a few years back.

I am in the process of figuring out the industries that I'd find in such a place, and what would fit into the space I have (and make a track plan where the ends actually sorta meet up to run in a circle).  Another thing that has me anxious is this is technically my first full layout (pool table ovals don't count).

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Posted by Mr. LMD on Monday, September 26, 2011 12:35 PM

Comrad_Durandal

 

 Mr. LMD:

 

This is just a general question that maybe some has asked you, but I would like to ask myself.

What is the backstory about your layout?

 

 

I know I haven't built mine yet, but the premise I'm running with is a Midwestern area where Amtrak is the primary rail carrier, and the freight companies operate leasing lines from THEM.  Besides Amtrak, I figure this would be BNSF, Canadian Pacific, and UP territory so it's open to all.  I am basing the scenery and areas on places I've seen when I rode the train from Yuma,AZ to Portland, OR to Minneapolis, MN via Amtrak a few years back.

I am in the process of figuring out the industries that I'd find in such a place, and what would fit into the space I have (and make a track plan where the ends actually sorta meet up to run in a circle).  Another thing that has me anxious is this is technically my first full layout (pool table ovals don't count).

 

Cool. I'm doing the same. My fictional railroad was formed after my fictional character, LMD. Manning, bought out all of the important illinois railroad and soonafter bought out other companies. I printed out a blank U.S.A. Blank outline map and for each locomotive Manning buys, it represents a railroad being bought like the U.P but instead of buying every rail line Manning buys certain lines that will help bring more travel to chicago and anywhere the line service. So far my layout only services coal, a steel mill, and a logging camp high in the mountains.

Mr. LMD, Owner, founder

The Central Chicago & Illinois Railroad

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Posted by BRAKIE on Monday, September 26, 2011 3:44 PM

The Columbus & Hocking Valley Ry is owned and operated by the CDB Industries and is one of 7 short lines owned by CDBI.The C&HV came into existence in 1978 when CDBI bought the old Athens sub-division of the Chessie System.During this purchase 2 other short lines was bought,the Parkersburg & Ohio Valley RR that ran from Parkersburg WV to Athens Oh and the Ohio Midland Ry that ran from Jackson,Oh to Newark,Oh.These 2 roads was quickly merged into the new C&HV.By purchasing these roads the CBDI finally had the long sought after southern Ohio coal fields and industries.The CDBI relaid the track from Nelsonville to Athens which had been removed by the C&O some years ago.The old Logan yards was rebuilt and upgraded during this time as it would serve as the home shops and the only major yard on the C&HV since it was centrally located on the line.The second yard would be located in the old C&O(nee CHV&T) Mound Street yard and would require trackage rights over the Chessie to reach..A agreement was struck with the Chessie for those rights.The former P&OV yard in Parkersburg was upgraded as was the OM yards at Jackson and Newark.

Commodities haul: Grain,Lumber,coal,coke,steel,fly-ash,food stuffs,sand,glass,corn sweetener,corn starch,vegetable oils,scrap,pipe,chemicals,paints,news print,pulpwood,wood chips and other general freight.Total cars handle 32,584 a year

 
CDBI owns the following roads.
Cumberland,Dickersonville & Bristol Ry.Cumberland to Bristol VA.The CD&B is the flagship road.The CDB in CDB Industries is the same.
Kentucky Central.Cumberland Ky to Maysville Ky.
Artemus-Jellico Artemus,Ky to Jellico TN.
Toledo & Southwestern. Maumee Oh to Fort Wayne IN
Cincinnati & Lake Erie.Cincinnati to Toledo.
Detroit Connecting.Detroit MI.
Columbus & Hocking Valley Ry.
Huron River.Huron,Oh..Currently mothballed pending sale.

Larry

Conductor.

Summerset Ry.


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Posted by Mr. LMD on Monday, September 26, 2011 4:15 PM

BRAKIE

The Columbus & Hocking Valley Ry is owned and operated by the CDB Industries and is one of 7 short lines owned by CDBI.The C&HV came into existence in 1978 when CDBI bought the old Athens sub-division of the Chessie System.During this purchase 2 other short lines was bought,the Parkersburg & Ohio Valley RR that ran from Parkersburg WV to Athens Oh and the Ohio Midland Ry that ran from Jackson,Oh to Newark,Oh.These 2 roads was quickly merged into the new C&HV.By purchasing these roads the CBDI finally had the long sought after southern Ohio coal fields and industries.The CDBI relaid the track from Nelsonville to Athens which had been removed by the C&O some years ago.The old Logan yards was rebuilt and upgraded during this time as it would serve as the home shops and the only major yard on the C&HV since it was centrally located on the line.The second yard would be located in the old C&O(nee CHV&T) Mound Street yard and would require trackage rights over the Chessie to reach..A agreement was struck with the Chessie for those rights.The former P&OV yard in Parkersburg was upgraded as was the OM yards at Jackson and Newark.

Commodities haul: Grain,Lumber,coal,coke,steel,fly-ash,food stuffs,sand,glass,corn sweetener,corn starch,vegetable oils,scrap,pipe,chemicals,paints,news print,pulpwood,wood chips and other general freight.Total cars handle 32,584 a year

 
CDBI owns the following roads.
Cumberland,Dickersonville & Bristol Ry.Cumberland to Bristol VA.The CD&B is the flagship road.The CDB in CDB Industries is the same.
Kentucky Central.Cumberland Ky to Maysville Ky.
Artemus-Jellico Artemus,Ky to Jellico TN.
Toledo & Southwestern. Maumee Oh to Fort Wayne IN
Cincinnati & Lake Erie.Cincinnati to Toledo.
Detroit Connecting.Detroit MI.
Columbus & Hocking Valley Ry.
Huron River.Huron,Oh..Currently mothballed pending sale.

 

WOW. I can see your railroad is a lot bigger than mine. :O

Mr. LMD, Owner, founder

The Central Chicago & Illinois Railroad

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Posted by leighant on Monday, September 26, 2011 6:25 PM

Looking for a name for my model railroad and for the name of the big city I wanted to model.  My favorite prototype is Santa Fe from the time I got my Lionel warbonnet streamliner set in 1950-something.  The Lionel catalog had an artist's painting of the train going through what looked like Monument Valley.  Romanticized Southwest.  Southwest.  A mission station like Albuquerque or San Diego or like SP's in San Antonio.  So many Santa Fe stations and towns had names in Spanish with some kind of a religious connotation.  Santa Fe = holy faith.  San Diego = Saint James.  Santa Cruz = holy cross.  And so on.  I thought of a real Santa Fe town in California-- Victorville in the desert.  And that reminded me of Vacaville, where there was some kind of prison disturbance.  And the name Santa Vaca came.  It means Sacred Cow, or Saint Cow, or Holy Cow!

            My railroading got started with a train around the Christmas tree, and after a while, I thought of a way the name Santa Vaca relates to Christmas.  I will tell you in advance it is entirely made up.

            The Legend of Santa Vaca

In one of the early Spanish missions established in Texas to convert the Indians, a priest was telling his congregation they should give to the church even though they didn't have much to give.  He said that God can use our gifts more than we know, and he told the story of the cow who gave up her feeding stall to make a place for the Baby Jesus to lay.  He said the cow's gift-- the manger-- became more a part of the Christmas scene than even the expensive gifts of the Wise Men.

But the Indians confused the cow in the priest's Christmas story with a buffalo cow who was worshipped in their pre-Christian native religion and they began to bring back the cult of the Holy Cow.  The Church tried to discourage the practice but could not stop it entirely.  The village near the mission took on the name Santa Vaca, and it grew into a major city served by a subsidiary of the Santa Fe Railway.

At the cathedral in Santa Vaca near where the mission once stood is a stained glass window with the manger scene featuring the Baby Jesus, the Virgin Mary and the Holy Cow, each with a halo.

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Posted by Fastball on Tuesday, September 27, 2011 9:19 PM

You know I have never really given much thought about actually giving my N scale layout a name.  When I look through model railroad magazines, I've wondered how some layouts get named but never found it important to give mine one.  I have given some thought about naming towns on my board, like maybe Edwardsville for my pop, or something to that effect, but haven't gotten to writing anything down.  Huh.  I've just kind of always thought that I wanted to run trains and CN became the railroad I started to model in 1990 after honeymooning in Alberta, Canada.  Before CN it was kind of a hodge-podge of stuff, mostly GN, with no real thought or direction.  Am I the odd man out because my layout doesn't have a history? 

-Paul

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Posted by Jacktal on Tuesday, September 27, 2011 10:02 PM

I'm curently designing my trackplan but haven't really nor will I try to replicate any specific area.My important concern is designing curves and grades that my articulated can negotiate on a limited size layout,and it is some challenge.After the tracks get laid down,then I'll concentrate on the scenery that I'd like believable at least,short of being a replica.However,I will model SP with some UP and CP thrown amongst them and will try to obtain some resemblance with this area.

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Posted by steinjr on Tuesday, September 27, 2011 10:30 PM

Fastball

Am I the odd man out because my layout doesn't have a history?

No. It just means that either it is fairly evident what your layout represents, or you simply don't care about what it represents. In either case, you feel no particular compunction to inflict on random bystanders attempts to explain away inconsistencies and implausibilities.

 In my opinion, "backstories" are mostly (at least in these model railroad forums) about forum posters who , for some reason not entirely clear to me, seem to be eager to try to make others accept and acknowledge that the ecclectic mix of trains the backstory fan is running is "sort of" plausible - if one postulates a railroad owned by an eccentric millionaire or billionaire.

The backstory person often also thinks this is an original approach, without realizing that it has been seen dozens of times before. Often the person will spend an inordinate amount of time on his back story, drawing large and complex system maps of railroads spanning large areas, and agonizing about this or that aspect of plausibility ("could there have been wineyards in Northern Alberta if the world had been tilted 20 degrees on it's axis by a huge comet striking it?"), or drawing up eleborate numbering schemes for a roster of 300 locomotives of 13 different classes, but when it comes to actually buckling down to design and build a layout that will fit into the space actually available, things tend to stop up.

Of course - there are also a few people who essentially just have a humorous little anecdote to explain a layout name (like the "holy cow" name on Leight Anthony's layout), or who just have a _brief_ rationale for some departure from actual history or geography.

As in "the main industry on the layout is based on mining and processing Flux, an additive used in many industrial processes" (doc Wayne's excellent layout). Or Chuck's japanese coal railroad running coal cars never seen in Japan before.

 Some background for industries on a layout certainly can make the layout more interesting. Doc Wayne has certainly succeeded in creating some memorable characters and industries on his very plausible looking and operating layout - Cookie Gibson - connoseur of beautiful women and the owner of the flux processing plant, the Hoffentooth Bros - owners of the coal and ice businesses in several towns on his line,  Barney what-his-name - the crazy (and seldom sober) barnstorming stunt pilot who takes aerial photos of industries on the layout, the various types of flux produced and shipped (Anhydrous flux in tank cars, anyone?) and so on and so forth. These things just add texture to a plausible looking layout.

 But on the whole, back stories (and especially the "eccentric millionaire buying and running whatever he likes" kind of back stories) are often a lot less interesting to other people than the layout owner may imagine. And they seldom succeed in convince others that a pretty implausible approach actually is sort of plausible.

 But hey - if people want to post back stories, let them post back stories.

Smile,
Stein

 

 

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Posted by Mr. LMD on Tuesday, September 27, 2011 10:41 PM

steinjr

 

 Fastball:

 

Am I the odd man out because my layout doesn't have a history?

 

 

No. It just means that either it is fairly evident what your layout represents, or you simply don't care about what it represents. In either case, you feel no particular compunction to inflict on random bystanders attempts to explain away inconsistencies and implausibilities.

 In my opinion, "backstories" are mostly (at least in these model railroad forums) about forum posters who , for some reason not entirely clear to me, seem to be eager to try to make others accept and acknowledge that the ecclectic mix of trains the backstory fan is running is "sort of" plausible - if one postulates a railroad owned by an eccentric millionaire or billionaire.

The backstory person often also thinks this is an original approach, without realizing that it has been seen dozens of times before. Often the person will spend an inordinate amount of time on his back story, drawing large and complex system maps of railroads spanning large areas, and agonizing about this or that aspect of plausibility ("could there have been wineyards in Northern Alberta if the world had been tilted 20 degrees on it's axis by a huge comet striking it?"), or drawing up eleborate numbering schemes for a roster of 300 locomotives of 13 different classes, but when it comes to actually buckling down to design and build a layout that will fit into the space actually available, things tend to stop up.

Of course - there are also a few people who essentially just have a humorous little anecdote to explain a layout name (like the "holy cow" name on Leight Anthony's layout), or who just have a _brief_ rationale for some departure from actual history or geography.

As in "the main industry on the layout is based on mining and processing Flux, an additive used in many industrial processes" (doc Wayne's excellent layout). Or Chuck's japanese coal railroad running coal cars never seen in Japan before.

 Some background for industries on a layout certainly can make the layout more interesting. Doc Wayne has certainly succeeded in creating some memorable characters and industries on his very plausible looking and operating layout - Cookie Gibson - connoseur of beautiful women and the owner of the flux processing plant, the Hoffentooth Bros - owners of the coal and ice businesses in several towns on his line,  Barney what-his-name - the crazy (and seldom sober) barnstorming stunt pilot who takes aerial photos of industries on the layout, the various types of flux produced and shipped (Anhydrous flux in tank cars, anyone?) and so on and so forth. These things just add texture to a plausible looking layout.

 But on the whole, back stories (and especially the "eccentric millionaire buying and running whatever he likes" kind of back stories) are often a lot less interesting to other people than the layout owner may imagine. And they seldom succeed in convince others that a pretty implausible approach actually is sort of plausible.

 But hey - if people want to post back stories, let them post back stories.

Smile,
Stein

 

 

I agree with you on your post. My post isn't for stealing any ideas, but to talk about ideas or talk about your layout.

Mr. LMD, Owner, founder

The Central Chicago & Illinois Railroad

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Posted by steinjr on Tuesday, September 27, 2011 11:11 PM

Mr. LMD

 My post isn't for stealing any ideas, but to talk about ideas or talk about your layout.

 Wasn't saying that you were stealing ideas. And even if you were to get inspired by someone else's layout, and want to copy or modify elements from it, it would not be a bad thing.

 But if you want to learn more about what other people are modeling, perhaps a better question would simply be : "what are you modeling?". 

 Or better yet - "I am thinking about modelling in N scale a railroad in the Midwest (or Applachians or the SouthWest or in urban surroundings on the east coast) in the steam/diesel transition era (or civil war era, or late 1800s, or early 1900s or 1970s or current times or whatever). I have a room <this big>. Anyone else modeling this subject and era? What are you modeling?".

 Or something more or less along those lines. The more specific you get about what you are looking for, the more likely it is that you will get responses that are relevant for you. Up to a point, of course - asking only for people who model the X, Y and Z railroad in A-town in May 1972 makes for relatively few respondents :-)

Smile,
Stein

 

 

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Posted by Texas Zepher on Tuesday, September 27, 2011 11:35 PM

Unlike the suggestion that the story is created to explain an ecclectic set of equipment, mine was quite opposite.   I developed the story from 1972-1976 and had it all completed before I started designing a model railroad to selectively compress the made up prototype.  I then started accumulating equipment to match the story and compressed space.

My Pine Ridge & North River actually began as simply the "Pine Ridge" as an English assignment sophomore year of high school.   We had to write a "short story" so I wrote mine about a fan trip on this imaginary railroad.  Through high school and college I used the railroad for mechanical drawing class, graphic arts class (that is why it has three progressively more modern logos), ecconomics, and geology.

The Pine Ridge began as a connector between the AT&SF northern main somewhere in SE Colorado, the Burlington (Colorado Southern) to the NE, and the Denver & Rio Grande Western to the W (narrow gauge & NW (standard gauge).   During WWII a large uranium deposit was discovered in the high valley that this railroad served.  The mine became a major source of traffic.  While mining the uranium other mineral deposits were found as well.  After the war the mountain resort traffic increased and the railroad even opened its own ski lodge at the railside.  In the high valley an aquifer was discovered and the soil conditions proved to be perfect for certain fruits and vegitables.  This added yet another source of revenue.

The railroad followed the lead of the Norfolk and Western resisting dieselizaion in favor of steam powered by its own coal mines on the route.   When the diesels did start coming they were second hand power other railroads had upgraded from.

That put the railroad into the mid 1950s and there it got stuck in time.     All the new farm towns in the high valley were named after girls I favored at the time (e.g. Dillion, Weiby, Wormington, McCall, etc.) while the resorts were named after the really special girls (e.g. Henderson, Weckmann).    There were more quirks to it, and it was fun at the time. Through high school the story evolved and was cleaned up and perfected.  Eventually there were more girls then room for towns so I just stopped doing that part.   Sometime when I was a senior the railroad expanded to North River - don't even remember why now.  In that expansion it made a connection with another Freelance in the resort Town of Emerson Lake.

----------

Of course I didn't know any of this at the time but the Santa Fe, Burlington (C&S), and D&RGW all meet in Trinidad Colorado.   Likewise a real short line railroad (Colorado & Wyoming - now Genesse & Wyoming?) ran from Trinidad up the valley to a coal mine.    There are uranium deposits in the area (well over one bump of mountains) and D&RGW actually served one of them for a time.   There is also the Wet Valley right in that area that indeed has aquiffers.  The north end of that valley goes through WestCliffe and meets with the Rio Grande Royal Gorge mainline (near Texas Creek?).   There was also a ski resort in the valley (Conquistador).   The only thing not here is the additional short line.    If I would have had a town named Stonewall and used the name Cuchara Pass as the high point on the line I would begin to wonder if I was psychic.

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Posted by steinjr on Tuesday, September 27, 2011 11:55 PM

Texas Zepher

 Unlike the suggestion that the story is created to explain an ecclectic set of equipment, mine was quite opposite.  

 I believe the suggestion I was making was that back stories (and in particular the "eccentric millionaire" type) often seem to be created to try to explain away inconsistencies or implausibilities. Not that they always serve that function :-)

 What you did was essentially to settle on a theme, era and location for your layout. It could briefly be described as a bridge route, with on-line mines, agricultural products, passenger traffic to resort, second hand diesels, 1950s, south/western Colorado.

 Smile,
 Stein

 

 

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Posted by wm3798 on Wednesday, September 28, 2011 12:16 AM

The backstory of the Laurel Valley was covered in the November/December 2010 N Scale Magazine, but it's also sketched out on my website.  It's easier to refer you there than to regurgitate it here...

Scroll about halfway down the page.  Thanks.

Lee

Route of the Alpha Jets  www.wmrywesternlines.net

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Posted by Mr. LMD on Wednesday, September 28, 2011 12:41 AM

wm3798

http://www.wmrywesternlines.net/gallery/albums/userpics/10001/Cover_Shots_027a.jpg

The backstory of the Laurel Valley was covered in the November/December 2010 N Scale Magazine, but it's also sketched out on my website.  It's easier to refer you there than to regurgitate it here...

Scroll about halfway down the page.  Thanks.

Lee

 

Nice layout. is that an updated scene or no? Also, I have your webpage bookmarked because your layout looks amazing and new modelers could learn something from your layout.

Mr. LMD, Owner, founder

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Posted by tomikawaTT on Wednesday, September 28, 2011 2:15 AM

Basic fallacious premise - there are coal seams in the Kiso Gorge, Nagano-ken, Japan.

Backstory.  Six close-typed legal pages (plus a map) explaining how things got named, who owns what and how nationalization changed the character of the railroad - starting clear back in the sisteenth century.  (I'll spare you the details.)  The main point is that the local coal-hauler was taken over, extended through a long tunnel (and had other major engineering changes) and became a secondary main line.  The truncated end that remained survived for years mostly on the annual payment for the line taken by the Imperial government - then the owning family uncovered a really good coal seam farther up the Tomikawa Valley,

At the same time, the mineowner's daughter showed up in the valley with her new boyfriend - who had gone into the U.S. Navy after being laid off when Roanoke completed its last S2!  He took one look at the yard full of teakettles and the new coal cleaning plant (so new it was still clean!) and promptly proposed.

Now, seven years later, our Virginia boy is Chief Mechanical Officer of the Tomikawa Valley Railway.  The result - locomotives and rolling stock like nothing else in Japan, all intended to move coal as cheaply and efficiently as possible.  Race Horse Smith would have loved it.  Stuart T. Saunders would have hated it - the only diseasels on the property are a four-wheel rail bus and an asthmatic diesel-mechanical that can barely move itself and one car on level track.  In the meantime, having assembled Japan's only Mallet, the TTT shop forces are picking through the junk to get parts for another articulated.

As for the rest of the line, now long nationalized?  It's partially electrified (1500VDC catenary) and diesels are making inroads in the steam fleet.  This comparatively insignificant route through the hinterlands sees well over 100 train movements on a slow day!  As a result, double-tracking is in progress, as is conversion to CWR on concrete ties.

Meanwhile, the ancient 5-tiered pagoda sits on its hilltop, overlooking it all.  Technology may be marching on, but the culture remains unchanged.

Chuck (Native Noo Yawker modeling Central Japan in September, 1964)

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Posted by wedudler on Wednesday, September 28, 2011 4:44 AM

I've built my Westport Terminal RR. This is a railroad in the 70-80th. It's a freelanced Terminal RR.

And I've started with my narrow gauge Pueblo & Salt Lake RR, also freelanced.

Wolfgang

Pueblo & Salt Lake RR

Come to us http://www.westportterminal.de          my videos        my blog

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Posted by blownout cylinder on Wednesday, September 28, 2011 5:49 AM

Great northern plain states and southern prairie provinces.

Abandoned rail got picked up by a trio of investors who had big plans to make their own rail empire...from Leemer on south with a few  spurs and interchanges betwixt and between...

Primary usage is grains of all sorts plus the tourist who are heading to fishing/hunting paradise to the north...oh...and Blue Circle Audio has a couple of plants here and there as wellWhistling

 

Any argument carried far enough will end up in Semantics--Hartz's law of rhetoric Emerald. Leemer and Southern The route of the Sceptre Express Barry

I just started my blog site...more stuff to come...

http://modeltrainswithmusic.blogspot.ca/

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Posted by ClinchValleySD40 on Wednesday, September 28, 2011 5:51 AM

Southeast coal hauler/bridge route circa 1980 very loosely based on the Clinchfield

Video tour of the railroad at:

http://www.youtube.com/user/ClinchValleySD40#p/u/6/EPdw9Gr-Gt0

 

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Posted by BRAKIE on Wednesday, September 28, 2011 6:26 AM

steinjr

 Texas Zepher:

 Unlike the suggestion that the story is created to explain an ecclectic set of equipment, mine was quite opposite.  

 

 I believe the suggestion I was making was that back stories (and in particular the "eccentric millionaire" type) often seem to be created to try to explain away inconsistencies or implausibilities. Not that they always serve that function :-)

 What you did was essentially to settle on a theme, era and location for your layout. It could briefly be described as a bridge route, with on-line mines, agricultural products, passenger traffic to resort, second hand diesels, 1950s, south/western Colorado.

 Smile,
 Stein

 

Stein,My CDB Industries is based on Rail America and GWI .However,all of the shortlines owned by my CDBI has been modeled my me at one time or the other-Detroit Connecting was my first freelance terminal railroad..The CD&B was my  N Scale railroad of the 80s and still very dear to my memory since my late wife and I planed and built this railroad.

The "history" of the C&HV is a play on RA's Indiana & Ohio  that operates the real old Athens Sub.

So,my concocted corporate history is based on actuality and therefore the locomotives was carefully chosen following prototype examples.

Larry

Conductor.

Summerset Ry.


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Posted by blownout cylinder on Wednesday, September 28, 2011 6:32 AM

@steinjr...

My rail line is fairly consistent in terms of motive power..RS1, 2, 3, 11's with the occasional H16-44 thrown in for good measure. Plus RDC's for passenger usage.

However, that does not stop me from using old Fred" How'dhedodat" Thompson from enjoying his tourist line that belongs to his Thompson Mills Railroad Museum and Ice Cream Emporium...LaughMischief

Any argument carried far enough will end up in Semantics--Hartz's law of rhetoric Emerald. Leemer and Southern The route of the Sceptre Express Barry

I just started my blog site...more stuff to come...

http://modeltrainswithmusic.blogspot.ca/

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Posted by caldreamer on Wednesday, September 28, 2011 7:12 AM

The Goldn State Railroad is a shortlline running from San Jose at the bottom of the San Francisco Peninsula east to the Sierra Nevda Moutntins and then noth to Southern Oregon, terminating at Medford, Or.  It begn when the Southern Pacific and Western Pacific were in financil trouble and we purchsed a number of their cast off lines.  With the purchase of a few shortlines and laying of some additional track the railraoad handes all traffic through northern California. An additional double track line with a 1.5% ruling grade, named the San Juan Cutoff had to be built to help accomodate all of the traffic over the Sierra Nevada Moutains.

 

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Posted by Mr. LMD on Wednesday, September 28, 2011 8:19 AM

It seems like their are some prototype modelers commenting. My question for you modelers is did you find modeling an actual railroad easier than freelancing?

Mr. LMD, Owner, founder

The Central Chicago & Illinois Railroad

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Posted by pastorbob on Wednesday, September 28, 2011 8:30 AM

Actually my main layout is based on the Santa Fe in Oklahoma, 1989, and includes Oklahoma City, Guthrie, Enid, and several smaller towns on a three deck layout.  The line ends up at Waynoka OK which is staging.

However, at Cherokee Ok on the Enid Dist, there used to be a Santa Fe branch line running north south and connecting with Santa Fe Cherokee.  That line was abandoned, but I resurrected it with a twist.  I made it a freelance struggling wheat hauling line connecting with Santa Fe.  The railroad is called the Oklahoma Northern, using a red and white paint scheme, has its own grain cars and a handful of geeps.  That satisfies both my freelance interest combined with my proto type interest.

The ON runs unit grain trains up to the Santa Fe, and has a yard at Cherokee joint with Santa Fe.

Works for me.

Bob

Bob Miller http://www.atsfmodelrailroads.com/
  • Member since
    May 2005
  • From: Westcentral Pennsylvania (Johnstown)
  • 1,496 posts
Posted by tgindy on Wednesday, September 28, 2011 9:47 AM

Mr. LMD
My question for you modelers is did you find modeling an actual railroad easier than freelancing?

When is the modeling of the prototype ever close enough?

Allen McClelland of the Virginian & Ohio modeled a freelanced railroad with the attitude of:  Being good enough!  V&O is one of the all-time classic model railroads while capturing the prototype's Appalachian coal railroading.

Conemaugh Road & Traction is based upon 2 "what if" concepts:

[1]  What If -- Pennsylvania Railroad had electrified from Harrisburg to Pittsburgh?

[2]  What If -- Johnstown Traction Company (w/PCCs) was a short line interurban?

The (N Scale) CR&T goal is to "Catch the Flavor" of traction in Western Pennsylvania where the Pennsy runs GG1s with catanary overhead -- where PRR is "going through town" while interchanging with the CR&T.

Note:  Pennsy prototype was always breezing into your town by coming from somewhere out there, and quickly leaving your community to the world beyond on that busy 4-track mainline with no less than 4 dozen train consists/day + the passengers on the Broadway Limited.

Whereas, the 100% freelanced CR&T has single wire overhead with motive-power of PCC & box motor => "the traction" -- plus some small diesel, and perhaps some steam => "the road" -- by serving industry + passenger.

Circa 1956 allows for this transition era flexibility.  Here is JTC prototype inspiration for the CR&T's lower layout portion (note the PCC, sub-station, and Beth-Steel), and; the PRR inspiration for upper level helix tunnel portal from the Gallitzin Tunnels.  There is an actual Conemaugh Valley with the Conemaugh River lending itself to the name:  Conemaugh Road & Traction.

Again, the idea is to catch the flavor of the area with the 2 what if concepts.

Conemaugh Road & Traction circa 1956

  • Member since
    November 2001
  • From: HIALEAH, FL
  • 157 posts
Posted by GARYIG on Wednesday, September 28, 2011 5:16 PM
Total freelance here. Modeling RI commuter services that would connect to Mass and north. Best thing about this hobby is just this, you can create real or not and it still works cause it's your RR LOL.
Gary Iglesias, Hialeah, FL http://photobucket.com/GARYS_TOWN
  • Member since
    June 2004
  • From: Orig: Tyler Texas. Lived in seven countries, now live in Sundown, Louisiana
  • 25,640 posts
Posted by jeffrey-wimberly on Wednesday, September 28, 2011 5:34 PM

My layout reflects my thinking of what the Louisiana and Arkansas might look like had they NOT bought up stock in the Kansas City Southern.

Running Bear, Sundown, Louisiana
          Joined June, 2004

Dr. Frankendiesel aka Scott Running Bear
Space Mouse for president!
15 year veteran fire fighter
Collector of Apple //e's
Running Bear Enterprises
History Channel Club life member.
beatus homo qui invenit sapientiam


  • Member since
    October 2001
  • From: US
  • 973 posts
Posted by jmbjmb on Wednesday, September 28, 2011 7:42 PM

I do a prototype inspired freelance.  My main inspiration is a local branch of the Southern, the Piedmont & Northern, and the Buffalo-Union Carolina.  By using them as inspiration, I am modeling the textile southeast in the mid 50s, but freelancing allows me the freedom to model towns and industries to fit the space I have without someone saying "I grew up in XYZ and that building was painted red with brown trim in September 1955" or some such.  You can never have enough prototype information to make everything correct, but with my approach, I am going for the effect -- "know I've been there, but can't quiet place it" feeling.

The back story and my "prototype" the SR, allows me to keep to a plausible there, but slide slightly if I see something I like.  For example the C&NW (Carolina & Northwestern, not that other one) was owned by SR and used SR paint schemes on their diesels, sorta, but lettered for the C&NW.  They also owned a one of a kind RS11 that the rest of the SR didn't.  This gives me the freedom to go slightly astray, but remain perfectly within the prototype  history.  And with the history of mergers, short lines, and whatnot in the SR family, you could slip one more in without anyone knowing.  And just to round things out, P&N became part of the SCL merger and while the BUC went away, SR did pickup some of the trackage for years serving the cotton mills in that area before they too went away.

  • Member since
    September 2011
  • From: chicago, Illinois
  • 683 posts
Posted by Mr. LMD on Wednesday, September 28, 2011 7:48 PM

GARYIG
Total freelance here. Modeling RI commuter services that would connect to Mass and north. Best thing about this hobby is just this, you can create real or not and it still works cause it's your RR LOL.

 

not to sound mean, but my layout is based around the fact that my railroad bought all the illinois major railroads including the rock island.

Mr. LMD, Owner, founder

The Central Chicago & Illinois Railroad

  • Member since
    February 2010
  • From: Colorado (the flat part)
  • 607 posts
Posted by Colorado_Mac on Thursday, September 29, 2011 12:00 AM

Small West Virginia city on the Ohio River served by the C&O.  US Government builds large army depot across the river during WWII, town has growth spurt, B&O builds a branch on the outskirts to serve depot, thus competition.  I'll never model the depot, just traffic to/from - and of course, the city and the two railroads.

Sean

HO Scale CSX Modeler

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