Dave H. Painted side goes up. My website : wnbranch.com
BRAKIE wrote: TZ,Any of the tracks you mention could be used as a yard..Sadly the B&ML cease operations on June 9,2005. The L&W is far from being a "Petticoat Jct" type of short line..While only 2 miles long it owns several hundred cars which seldom sees home rails.
TZ,Any of the tracks you mention could be used as a yard..Sadly the B&ML cease operations on June 9,2005.
The L&W is far from being a "Petticoat Jct" type of short line..While only 2 miles long it owns several hundred cars which seldom sees home rails.
Nuh uh. The B&ML is back in business running excursions from Unity to Burnham Jct.. http://www.belfastrailroad.com/docs/schedule.pdf
Andre
dehusman wrote:quote Texas Zepher dehusman said "A handy way of looking at it is the concept that a yard is a verb. Yards are places where cars move from one train to the other" That is an intersting definition. But then isn't every interchange and industrial track a yard? One train leaves the car at a grain elevator and a different one picks it up. =================== The difference is that at an industry or interchange the car changes destination or condition or staus or control. From load to empty, from empty to load, from going to industry A to going to industry B, from railroad A to railroad B. In a switching yard the car doesn't normal change destinations or status. The switching process doesn't change it from a load to an empty or vice versa, or which railroad has control. It changes the car from one train to another. Dave H. PS: The quote feature appears to be broke in IE7
-Dan
Builder of Bowser steam! Railimages Site
BRAKIE wrote:The L&W is far from being a "Petticoat Jct" type of short line..While only 2 miles long it owns several hundred cars which seldom sees home rails.
BRAKIE wrote:So,show me a layout without a working yard and I will show you a un-prototypical layout-stagging yards don't count simply because they are "off layout" destination points.
Them are purty strong words, pardner! I could point out that there is a lot of railroad BETWEEN yards - including all kinds of industries! If a modeler with a well-organized list of givens and druthers wants a model railroad that emphasizes open-country running and small-town switching, that is his decision. The layout he builds may be very prototypical indeed (especially if he has decided to reproduce every significant structure in a couple of prototypically accurate towns.)
Staging for more than one train IS a yard, especially if it's a fiddle yard. If I had decided to go the "no yards" route, I would still operate the staging at both ends of my visibly-modeled main line in the same manner - turning or changing waybills, emptying coal loads at the "down" end and swapping other open-top loads as the waybills require. The only thing I would lose by shifting town names a few notches would be engine changes, limited passenger train stops and most of my freight switching (a lot more cars would simply run through.) I would still be operating in prototype fashion, to the same timetable, with the same passenger consists and the same number and length freight trains.
Facts are, however; and for me the fact is that operating my engine change subdivision point, with its small classification yard and its busy interchange connections, is a BIG part of my fun. I'm not about to re-designate stations and lose that. (not to mention that it would make 35-50% of my motive power unuseable.
Chuck (whose roster is 50% coal burning, 35% juice burning and 15% diesel burning)
andrechapelon wrote: BRAKIE wrote: TZ,Any of the tracks you mention could be used as a yard..Sadly the B&ML cease operations on June 9,2005. The L&W is far from being a "Petticoat Jct" type of short line..While only 2 miles long it owns several hundred cars which seldom sees home rails. Nuh uh. The B&ML is back in business running excursions from Unity to Burnham Jct.. http://www.belfastrailroad.com/docs/schedule.pdf Andre
Cool! But,a excursion line does not make a short line..So as a freight carrying short line the B&ML is no more.
Larry
Conductor.
Summerset Ry.
"Stay Alert, Don't get hurt Safety First!"
I think the minimalist approach works for my shortline RR. A yard is necessary, but doesn't have to take up that much real estate. It can serve multiple functions, too.
This is the yard just east of the mopac interchange. It's called Hawksbill Station. (any sci-fi reader know that one?) Starting from the bottom of the picture and working up you can see a small RIP track, two engine mx tracks, and a MOW/caboose track. The three double ended tracks serve as a shuffle track, the main line and the interchange track for the nearby junction.
The Cedar Branch & Western--The Hillbilly Line!
johncolley wrote: Aaaarrrgggh! The whole purpose of a yard is to sort cars, make up trains, and move 'em out! If you are taking three hours and not departing a train, the hoboes will have apartments! Happy railroading! LOL jc5729
Aaaarrrgggh! The whole purpose of a yard is to sort cars, make up trains, and move 'em out! If you are taking three hours and not departing a train, the hoboes will have apartments! Happy railroading! LOL jc5729
I might as wells start building those apartments.
Sometimes the train has NO place to DEPART TO! Except on paper.
Safety Valve wrote: johncolley wrote: Aaaarrrgggh! The whole purpose of a yard is to sort cars, make up trains, and move 'em out! If you are taking three hours and not departing a train, the hoboes will have apartments! Happy railroading! LOL jc5729 I might as wells start building those apartments. Sometimes the train has NO place to DEPART TO! Except on paper.The FRA man could've showed up. Could be snowing. The train still needs inspection by the carmen, when it comes in, and again before it leaves.
Safety Valve wrote: johncolley wrote: Aaaarrrgggh! The whole purpose of a yard is to sort cars, make up trains, and move 'em out! If you are taking three hours and not departing a train, the hoboes will have apartments! Happy railroading! LOL jc5729 I might as wells start building those apartments. Sometimes the train has NO place to DEPART TO! Except on paper.
Mike WSOR engineer | HO scale since 1988 | Visit our club www.WCGandyDancers.com
The minimalist approach will be what I do as well. For starters, I have a 6'x13' area to work with, so not much room in HO scale. I will be modeling what used to be a shortline, taken over by Southern Railway, in 1957. This will also have a secondary branchline which goes out to serve a mining outfit. As such, these branchlines usually had minimal yards, I believe in my case the "yard" was essentially 3 tracks next to the depot, one of which was the "main", the second served as the passing track, and the 3rd served any and all other purposes. It could have been a "bad order" storage track, an empties/loads holding track (especially during harvest season), a team track, or whatever. I haven't found any old historical resources for the mines, but I would think the mine would need no more than 2 tracks, with a runaround built in somewhere.
And, just for good measure on the minimalist approach, as a general rule, all railroads use this approach. That is to say, they try to use as little as possible (trackwise, amount of rolling stock, locomotives, etc) to get the job done. Those of us who have giant multi-track yards, while having less than a 2 scale mile main line, are kind of going overkill on the yards. Now, don't anybody take that the wrong way, having a large yard is just fine, even if you just have the yard which runs off to staging on both ends. If that's your thing, and you design it to work that way so you can just switch cars all day long, more power to you.
BTW, if anyone has any ideas on how to use the 6x13 space I have, I'll post a ? about this over on the layout design forum.
Brad
EMD - Every Model Different
ALCO - Always Leaking Coolant and Oil
CSX - Coal Spilling eXperts
There was a yard created and a article written in this year's MR some months ago that is like.. a perfect yard. The only issues to be determined is the length (Based on average trains departing) and how many storage tracks and where to put the main/engine areas.
For example if Falls Valley dispatched a train from Last Chance Mine to the yard I can expect at least 10 coal cars on that turn inbound. That in addition to an engine and caboose will make a rather long model train that will need a good arrival track to accomodate it when it arrives.
Of those ten coal cars I know 2 will go to the coal tower at the yard, 4 to Cold Harbor Port and 3 to Falls Valley and 3 for interchange to the rest of the world. That means the yard will need one storage track for each area and one track to hold "Throughs" or trains going off to the outside world.
So I already am up to three yard storage tracks. When these fill up I can call a crew and send a train out. I already know that Falls Valley will be the biggest user of cars so it will get the longest track. LastChance Mine will probably get it's own storage track to collect empties going to the mine but am not sure yet.
That Coal Train schedule is then automatically determined on how soon the next coal empties return which should occur on the "Next Ops session"
If a train showed up toting a large number of cars I might have to use two arrivals to stuff it all in before sorting it. Just hope to get it sorted and cleared before the next one arrives =)
With that in mind (Perfect or flawed -your choice) I see the yard as a "Organizer" for the railroad instead of a resource black hole.
Considering that I am running 5 feet of workbench track and planning construction I think that I might be ahead of the game of wondering what to do and how to do it.
Nope!!! I kept it simple.
4x8 are fun too!!! RussellRail