Been adding some lights to the layout:
Matt from Anaheim, CA and Bayfield, COClick Here for my model train photo website
Matt,
Nice work!
Mike Lehman
Urbana, IL
Is the SantaFe sign a pre-made sign or something you made?
I tried making signs with electrolumiecent wiring but the results were okay at best.
Your lighting on this scene is VERY realistic - but I was blown away by a lot of your work.
Chris.
Loco Guy - is a state of mind - not an affinity to locomotives.
Sit back and enjoy your track...
Chris,
I think you mean this pic of Matt's. I'll try reposting the link, as the pic is not coming through here on my machine now...
http://southwestchief.deviantart.com/art/HO-Layout-Night-1-502192119
The Santa Fe sign may be by Blair Line. They offer it in two sizes, 1.2" long for $9.95 (184-1511) and 2" long for 11.95 (184-2511).
i finally got around to putting some lights in my rolling mill building. i cut a section of 3 leds from the roll. covering the two end ones with elec. tape. so its a single led doing the work. and its a warm white led.
the pic was taken with f/8 ISO-100 4 sec.
auto settings
FB page of my layout *new*
https://www.facebook.com/ghglines
.
thread to my layout
http://www.warcrc.net/forum/showthread.php?t=10505
pics
http://s237.photobucket.com/user/rockcrawling/library/#/user/rockcrawling/library/ho%20scale%20trains?sort=3&page=1&_suid=1388183416990004180295067414064
GGOOLER,
Very nice, atmospheric pics!
I'm curious about taping over the other 2 of the 3 LEDs. Was it too bright? Better to add more resistance, as having all three running gives a more even lighting effect. You can't hurt them, the worst that can happen if they get dim or go out -- then just take some of the ohmmage back out. They'll be fine.
I've used as much as 120,000 ohm on a 3-LED segment. That will give you really dim. This was for what was supposed to be a RPO interior with something like 24 volt bulbs running off a genset or batteries, so needed to be low.
What I haven't done yet is sliced a segment up into individual LEDs. These should work out to pretty much the standard 4.5 volts or less that individual LEDS often take as about the top end voltage (many are less closer to to 3 volts, so be sure to match specs ). But the fact is each one of those is actually 3 smaller LEDs behind a diffuser and that requires more power. The trick will be to figure which leads supply each single segment.
Been awhile since I updated here, but a heads up in case you're thinking about a conversion to LED lighting. Menards put a group of "LED Tape Light" products in "white" (daylight) and "warm white" (the yellowish white) on the shelf in their electronics section of the electrical dept in our local store. These look to be separate from the Patriot Lighting light strips I typically use (located with all the other LED lighting, alos in the electrical dept.)
These are branded as LEDlightingemperor.com inside the box. Outside in tiny print they say "Intertek." These come in the familiar 6' and 13' lengths, but also longer, up to 45'! Better yet, they are all priced at about $1/foot or less! In other words, they are about 1/5 the cost of the Patriot brand stuff I have been using. The warranty is only 1 year, where the Patriot is 5 years. However, the build quality seems at least as good, if not better. Plus they are about 20% higher lumen/light output than the Patriot ones.
There has never been a better time to go LED than right now. For about $100, I had 150' of the most intense LEDs I've yet used, enough to make another complete pass throughout the layout. Here are some before and after pics of this addition.
Animas Forks Before
Animas Forks After
Durango Before
Durango After
Silverton Before
Silverton After
Items in this part of the store change constantly, so best to go in search of them asap as they may not stay on the shelves long at these prices -- the 45'9' long ones are just $25!
It's time to update some product info and introduce a new lighting item that is good to know about. Menards discontinued the LED strip lights I wrote up using extensively in several earlier comments in this thread earlier this year. They now sell a wide selection of the more conventional strip lighting that requires a separate transformer.
Menards is offering a new product in their Patriot house brand lighting that doesn't directly replace strip lighting, but instead provides a way to usefully supplement it. It's called LED Neon Lighting.
The Neon lighting appears to be a LED strip light embedded inside a translucent plastic tube which diffuses the light to generally direct the light underneath over ~180 degrees from horizon to horizon. This contrasts with the old strip lights, which tended to be more directional and could be rotated and aimed to illuminate as needed.
The Neon lighting contains no neon, it just looks like it, and is available in warm and cool white. The cool white ones match the daylight strip lighting well at around 5000k color temp. Pricing is around $35/13', although they have been on sale for around $30 recently.
This pic shows the lighting tube and end connector with the power off. The connector is unique to this series of lights, allowing connection of up to 12 of the 13' long sections. The U-shaped holding clip supplied with the lighting is also shown. It attaches with two screws and the tube assembly is pushed into it to hold the tube in place.
With the deep/tall scenes on the layout well-illuminated by multiple passes through them by the strip lighting, I used the Neon lighting generally to illuminate the front edge of the layout. Here's how this follows along the front edge of the layout in parallel with the aisle, with the other white lighting strips turned off.
I've always had issues lighting the mountains that surround Animas Forks, but adding a Neon second run that followed the peaks helped that a lot. I started off with about 3 of the plastic U-clips, then because of where it needed to be, I used ty-wraps through the gridwork of the overhead lighting leaving them loose until all was in position worked well as seen here.
The unwinding coil of Neon rests conveniently on the covered turntable here as I work it past the delicate tramway buckets.
With most photography done in automated mode, it can be hard to capture exactly the right scenic improvement offered by the new lighting, although this pic manages to show the more even illumination pretty well.
A longer view.
While the exact results are hard to depict here, the lighting improvement is well worth it in person.
ROARING!
ROAR
The Route of the Broadway Lion The Largest Subway Layout in North Dakota.
Here there be cats. LIONS with CAMERAS
In honor of the September 2019 issue of Model Railroader's focus on "Railroading after dark" I'm giving my Night Scene thread a bump to make it easy to find. There's a lot of useful tips and tricks to lighting your layout here. While some covers daytime lighting, you'll find plenty to think about when contemplating the darkness coming alive with a few - or even a lot of -- LEDs.
I like those flexible neon strips from Menard's.
I will certainly look for those when I make my annual trip to Indianapolis in October.
-Kevin
Living the dream.
mlehmanIn honor of the September 2019 issue of Model Railroader's focus on "Railroading after dark" I'm giving my Night Scene thread a bump to make it easy to find. There's a lot of useful tips and tricks to lighting your layout here.
Thanks again Mike, definitely a thread that keeps on giving. Over the years knowledge gained from this thread has been applied to my layout scene lighting.
thanks to all the contributors. Regards, Peter
Peter,
Thanks for the appreciation. I gain inspiration from every one of your scenes.
Well done Mike!
While I enjoy seeing photos of night scenes by others, I opted out of doing night scenes on my own layouts many years ago.Here's a LINK to some others which also impressed me.
(They're spread over several pages, and not all views are night scenes, but impressive modelling nevertheless.)
Wayne
EC and Doctor Wayne,
Thanks so much for your kind comments! They are especially meaningful to me coming from you two.
Wayne,
That Magoun pier module is outstanding work, lots of intense modeling in a small space and the lighting really sets it off.
doctorwayne While I enjoy seeing photos of night scenes by others, I opted out of doing night scenes on my own layouts many years ago.Here's a LINK to some others which also impressed me. (They're spread over several pages, and not all views are night scenes, but impressive modelling nevertheless.) Wayne
Rich
Alton Junction
mlehman EC and Doctor Wayne, Thanks so much for your kind comments! They are especially meaningful to me coming from you two.
mlehmanMenards is offering a new product in their Patriot house brand lighting that doesn't directly replace strip lighting, but instead provides a way to usefully supplement it. It's called LED Neon Lighting.
I wanted to update this info with a problem that came up for me and a solution for that. Here's the Problem:
I know that "sagging" is the in thing with young folks nowadays, but this is ridiculously unfashionable on my RR. Here's the culprit:
Many/most of the plastic mounting clips have developed middle-aged spread and started dropping the Neon Liights onto the secnery below. Some sort of QC issue, I suppose. There is a quick and easy answer to this issue. Drill a couple of holes near the top of the U-clip, then run a small tywrap through.
A view looking at what will be the bottom once clip is mounted on the ceiling.
The next pic is kind of cruddy, but my iPhone's camera interacts with the pulse it sees when looking at the lighting LEDs and reacts badly. The pic shows the LED Neon Strip installed and held fast by my mode.
Now my sagging problem is fixed.