The thread about favorite MR Staffer got me thinking. Of all the very fine layouts MR has featured over the years which is your favorite?
Mine would have to be Eric Boorman's Utah Belt.
-George
"And the sons of Pullman porters and the sons of engineers ride their father's magic carpet made of steel..."
I like the Argentine layout featured last month.
A couple years ago, Tony Koester did a 1 x 7 switching layout in Model Railroad Planning, I really liked.
Iain Rices's, Gary, Indiana layout from Mid-sized an Manageable Track Plans--although I wish he would have called it something else.
Chip
Building the Rock Ridge Railroad with the slowest construction crew west of the Pecos.
PAnERR wrote: The thread about favorite MR Staffer got me thinking. Of all the very fine layouts MR has featured over the years which is your favorite?
Crooked Mountain Lines of Bob Hegge. Almost made me switch to traction.
Enjoy
Paul
Over say the past 20 years, I'd go with Art Fahie's N-scale Niagara & Pearl Creek. It includes a wide selection of well executed differing scenes, ranging from highly complex urban areas to rolling seacoast hills.
If we go back more than 20 years, then there are several contenders.
CNJ831
Some of my favourite layouts throughout the years:
* Gorre & Daphetid, John Allen (HO)* Franklin & South Manchester, George Sellios (HO)* Cumberland Valley, Bill and Wayne Reid (N)* Sunset Valley, Bruce Chubb (HO) including it's new incarnation Sunset Valley Oregon System.
Another one I liked very much is the Southern Pacific con otros by Ron Kuykendall. It has been featured a number of times starting in the 70's. It was again featured in a recent Great Model RR's but by that time rebuilt in a much smaller version.
The Jerome & Southwestern was a great project, I have a copy of that book and find myself reading it often. I also liked his mini-project Tascosa & Calico in HOn3.
Frank
Chuck Hitchcock's Argentine Division of the ATSF.
It's a real shame he dismantled it in favor of his new project.
Favorites:
https://tstage9.wixsite.com/nyc-modeling
Time...It marches on...without ever turning around to see if anyone is even keeping in step.
When I "archive" my issues of MR, I cut out all the articles that I expect will have some use in the future, staple those together and put them in a plastic sleeve in a binder. Everything else, including most of the layout photo tour articles (not the layout construction articles), goes to recycling. Most of those layout tours fall into the "you've seen one, you've seen them all" category. A few of the exceptions that I have kept in my archive are: Jack Burgess' Yosemite Valley, Lance Mindheim's HO Monon, Bill Ven der Meer's Sweetwater & Orient (ATSF), Perry Amicangelo's C&NW, and Bob Madison's Ninigret Cove/Dorrville Branch (NYNH&H). I guess I prefer the well-detailed smaller layouts with a unique theme to another massive, but boring, version of Horseshoe Curve or Tehachapi Loop.
Tom
I guess I would limit my 'favorites' to MR 'Project' layouts. The 'Communipaw & Portage Hill was a nice small railroad that could be 'operated'. A few years later they did the 'Pintada(sp) Central' which could be expanded as the 'core' of a larger layout.
The last few project layouts has been 'what can I build on a hollow door core' or some variation of a basic 4 by 8. The last one with Kato Uni-Track and Woodland Scenics 'grass mat' scenery seemed to be pointing is to tinplate layouts where we started as kids.
I would like to see MR do a project railroad that could be expanded, and took the modeler through using medium to advanced construction methods. Something that would take 5-6 issues of the magazine to complete. The modeler does not 'grow' without a 'challenge' and will lose interest if just 'assembling' RTR parts is all there is to the hobby.
The club I belong to is building a 27' by 27' layout(double deck with staging). About 1/2 of the members have never built a layout, but are more than willing to learn about good track laying and wiring. One of them mentioned that he feels the dues are worth the 'education' he is getting before he starts on his own layout! Before he started laying flex track, he thought that was 'advanced' stuff and he would stick Bachmann EZ Track for a home layout....
Jim
Modeling BNSF and Milwaukee Road in SW Wisconsin
Of the MR Project layouts, my favorites are:
Note that all of my favorite project layouts except Tidewater Central were expanded during the course of the series. Sierra Pintada was not expected to be used as built as a stand-alone.
Of the personal layouts, favorites are:
Looking over my favorites list, I see several common aspects as to why these layouts come to mind:
just my thoughts
Fred W
tstage wrote: Favorites: Cliff Power's Mississippi, Alabama & Gulf (From Great Model Railroads 2007, pg. 84-93) - Not so much the layout itself but Cliff's beatiful detail work.Tom
Here is the link to the MA&G
http://magnoliaroute.com/magnolia%20route.htm
Also this one was in the artical on basements;
Jim Brewer: Norfolk and Western Railroad
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/rdaniels2/layout1.htm
Rensselaer Model Railroad
http://railroad.union.rpi.edu/
Here is three I like.......but there are more....!!!!
Love Cliff Powers layout it is stunning.
My other favourites would be Eric Brooman's various Utah Belt's and Pelle Soeberg's modern UP layout.
James, Brisbane Australia
Modelling AT&SF in the 90s
Bob Boudreau
CANADA
Visit my model railroad photography website: http://sites.google.com/site/railphotog/
Railphotog wrote:My all time favorite layout article was "The Fundy Northern Expands", the July 1986 cover story. Written by that all round great fellow Bob Boudreau!
Whoa! Didn't see that coming!
fwright wrote:Hayden and Frary's HOn30 Carabasset and Dead River.
That also reminds me of a series of modules that were done about a year later. I can't remember the name of the series but they inspired me with how much could be done in a tiny space. That reminds me - What happened to the magazine index that used to be at the top of every page - Bergie BRING IT BACK!
Bob Hayden's Carbassest & Dead River
Turtle Creek Central
V&O
Utah Belt are just a few
June 1976 had a layout I think was called the Pacific Northern, built by a fellow and his wife, somewhere in the Carribean. The layout was huge.
Dave
There are so many.
Mine would be;
John Gray's Union Pacific in Wyoming- HO.
Lorell Joiner's O Scale Great Southern.
Monroe Stewart's N scale Hooch Junction.
Just to name a few....
George/Seacoast, NH
One more vote for the Utah Belt.
First saw it in the mid 80's, took me a while to figure out it wasn't
a real RR. The latest version is simply fantastic.
I've gained a ton of insperation from Joe Fugate's Siskiyou Line and the video series. What got me initially interested was the MR 4x8 Red Wing layout and David Barrow's switching district. My layout will be similar in design (shape, not substance) as Pelle's so I'd say I like his layout also.
Nate
I havent been around that much (only 3 years) to see alot of layouts. The 2 that stick out most in my mind as the appeal to the most for how I want my layout to be would ..
The Utah Belt (I love to see that one in perosn some day) and Peter Solleberg's layout.
I look to those to inspire me.
Best Regards, Big John
Kiva Valley Railway- Freelanced road in central Arizona. Visit the link to see my MR forum thread on The Building of the Whitton Branch on the Kiva Valley Railway
Guys,That is a rough call to make because there have been hundreds of great layouts over the years.However,I must thin them down to 2 groups small and mega.
Ben King's Timber City & Northwestern.A small but,well executed layout.
Steve Flanigan's Georgia Southern RR. This was a small short line layout set in the South..It also won first place in MR's small layout contest in the 90s.
Mega
Tony Koesters Allegheny Midland..
Allen McClelland's Virginian & Ohio
Larry
Conductor.
Summerset Ry.
"Stay Alert, Don't get hurt Safety First!"