QUOTE: Originally posted by Jetrock Indeed--the problem with a 4x8 is not that it's too small, but that the intact 4x8 sheet of plywood is a ridiculously inefficient use of the space! Consider that you need two feet of clearance around each side of the layout, that 4x8 foot layout (32 square feet) actually consumes a 6x12 area--72 square feet!
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QUOTE: Originally posted by SpaceMouse I have a Digitrax Zephyr and 3 UT5 jacks. I can reach any part of the layout with a throttle. What I can't do is reach a car for ucoupling at half the places I need from the control panel where I throw the switches. So if I placed 3 cars on three tracks I would have to throw a switch, go to the other side and uncouple, go back and throw a switch, go to the other side and uncouple, go back and throw a switch, go to the other side and uncouple, go back and throw a switch...ergo the problem The layout looks like this naked, The control pannel is on theother side of the bridge. You can barely see it, it is black. Most of the switching is done in the "yard"--which is really industry set outs and engine service.
QUOTE: Originally posted by dgwinup Chip, You already have the DCC. Put stationary decoders on the turnouts. Or you could just move the control panel to the other side of the layout. (Notice how easy it was for me to suggest that? As long as I don't have to rewire everything, it's easy!) Darrell, quiet...for now
Chip
Building the Rock Ridge Railroad with the slowest construction crew west of the Pecos.
QUOTE: Originally posted by mondotrains Hi Folks, I'm 57 years old and probably older than many of you on the forum and therefore will speak to you as a "father" would. For you older guys, I'm probably not telling you anything new that you haven't already discovered. The size of the layout has absolutely nothing to do with the amount of fun you can have in this hobby. It's the "journey" that we must all learn to enjoy and not the finished product, whether it's trains, high school or college educations, or whatever endeavor we are embarked on. Model railroading is all about going to train shows with a list of "wants"; driving to the local hobby shop and seeing what's new; getting on the internet like I did this morning and discovering a tank car at an on-line retailer that's been out of production for some time and now anxiously awaiting its arrival in the mail. Model railroading is getting as excited about that big train show coming up as we did waiting for Santa when we were 5 years old. Trust me....I've seen huge layouts that lack the detail and drama of some of the 4 x 8' layouts I've seen. That doesn't make any layout better of worse. If someone is enjoying their layout....that's all that matters and nobody should discourage anyone. I've said many times that if more people discovered model railroading, there would be a lot less problems in this world. Those guys that sit around drinking and smoking at the local bars would be closer to home and would be spending their money creating something they'd enjoy, rather than destroying their lungs and livers. Well, enough of my "dad" philosophy. Enjoy yourself....as one of my best friends always says. Mondo
Larry
Conductor.
Summerset Ry.
"Stay Alert, Don't get hurt Safety First!"
QUOTE: Originally posted by Jetrock A 4x8 set up in an interesting way, like the "diamond" configuration, a collapsible/concealable design, or the old backdrop-down-the-middle trick (like the Pacific Coast Air Line) are ways of teaching that old 4x8 dog new tricks. I suppose I'm the oddball in finding no need for a loop, but calling any shelf layout a "switching puzzle" is just as much of a generalization as calling a 4x8 loop a "toy train" configuration--my layout is intended for switching and operation, but it's not a switching puzzle. It's a functioning layout, intended to model the way that a prototypical industrial belt line serves industries by moving them from yard to industries and back. A 4x8 can also be set up for operation and switching--but I don't have enough room for a 4x8 in my garage!
QUOTE: Originally posted by hminky 2. This obsession with staging, to paraphrase the late great Frank Ellison why cover up tracks that can be used for more operating fun. I think real estate is too expensive to be used for car storage. Ellison proposed using that staging track for operation, make it a division point, a working yard. Just a thought Harold
Have fun with your trains
QUOTE: Originally posted by hminky Chip There is no staging on my layout. It is the standard 4x8 with two towns. I just haven't worked on the other half. The only feature that is not standard is the loads-in/empties-out connection in the middle. See my web article about that at: http://www.pacificcoastairlinerr.com/4x8/operation/lilo/ That layout plan is a modified version of the On30 design from the 2002 Model Railroad Planning annual. It really isn't even my plan. I have built several other operational small layouts and never felt the need for staging. I have built those without the scenery divider and operated them with two towns. I once had a figure 8 spaghetti bowl with four towns on a monitor shaped 4x8. You shouldn't condemn the 4x8 unless you built a well planned 4x8 and didn't like it. Just a thought Harold
QUOTE: Originally posted by Don Gibson A 4'X 8' is piece of ply with track on it Simple?- yes. Inexpensive?- maybe. Inovative? - seldom. But Conserving space?- WRONG! Anything wider than 3' needs walk-around space. A 4'X8' takes up lot's more room. (just try operating a 4X8 in a 4'X8' room.) most 'smaller room's today are 10'x12'. A 4X8 will take up all of it. 3 sheet's of ply will fill the same room, with two ea cut crosswise (4'X4's) and the third lengthwise (2X?) to fill the same room with YOU in the middle. You reach everything, and can have curves up to 44"r. Entry can be a ' lift up' section. Cost of 2 extra sheets of ply - $15-$30 'Guilding the Lilly': Sheet Foam on top of ply allow's for easy river bed;s, culvert's, hill's, canyon's and other realistc RR terrain. Same idea cutting ONE sheet of ply into 4 equal sections (2'X4's) and installing board lumber between sections - gives 22"r. cirves.
QUOTE: Originally posted by SpaceMouse IF you bring trains from an unseen "rest of the world" and ship them off to an unseen "rest of the world" that is staging. To use a play or "stage" metaphor, you are taking them "off stage." When they are "off stage" you can fiddle with them or not and restage them for the next op session. You have a scene and an off stage. You do staging.
QUOTE: Originally posted by oleirish If I can help some one I will,but will not run them or there layouts down!! JIM