This small Tool House is being constructed from basswood strips, board and batten sheet, and a Grandt Line door casting. Below is the tool house shelter as of 11/30/13. It occupies a space of 4-1/2 by 3-1/4 inches and will have rails leading into it for a hand pump car.
Saturday, November 30, 2013
Ackerman Passenger Shelter
This small Passenger shelter is being constructed from basswood strips and board and batten sheet. Below is the shelter as of today. It occupies a space of 3-1/2 by 2-1/4 inches.
Structures for the layout
I have started construction of some structures for the Western Maryland end of the railroad. Here are the first three I am working on. As progress on each structure I will update these three posts until they are finished. In other words each post will deal with the construction of one structure and will contain all the posts for that structure.
Sunday, November 10, 2013
The "one-module" challenge by Joe Fugate as published in the May 2013 issue of Model Railroad Hobbyist.
Have you been planning that dream layout for years? How's it coming?
Still stuck in analysis paralysis? Or maybe you've started construction, but can't seem to finish anything?
Still stuck in analysis paralysis? Or maybe you've started construction, but can't seem to finish anything?
We modelers can dream big, but we do struggle making good on our aspirations. Time for the "one-module" challenge!
Rather than aim for the stars, let's deliberately set the scope small so it's possible to finish in weeks
or months instead of years.
Pick a subject/scene that interests you, but chose
something that fits into a single module of no more than 6 feet in
length. Then build it to completion at your workbench:
- All track work finished and wired, with turnouts fully functional
- All the scenery done, including ground cover, trees and water
- All the structures done, including any bridges and trackside details
If you take up the challenge, it may be more work than
you thought, and may take longer than expected. But by
working at your workbench, you can turn the module over, for
example,
to mount any Tortoises or to run the wires - making
otherwise tedious work into something that's halfway pleasant. You
will tend to do better work at your workbench and be more
satisfied
with the result.
Once you have this module, now add a 1x12 at each end with some staging tracks and now run trains through your finished scene!
Next, do a second module. Add this module to the other
one, and move the staging to the end. Now you can run trains a
little farther through finished scenes and things have gotten more
interesting.
And notice - you have a finished-looking, operational
layout in record time. Yes, it's small, but it's a complete layout!
So how about building your whole layout in this way, one
section at a time? At any stage you can point to it with pride and
have a complete layout. I think using this sectional approach has a lot
going for it, as opposed to the more traditional approach that can
take years before you see any real progress or can get your
"running trains" fix. Or worse, the entire layout project will languish
once you realize the massive scope of the project.
Turn the whole dream layout building process inside out
and start tiny instead, with something you might actually be able
to finish in less than a year! And then just do it over and over …
and quit at any point with a "complete" layout.
Anyone up for the "one module" challenge?
Sunday, October 13, 2013
Middle Eastern Region of the NMRA Convention
Here are some photos of two of the three modular layouts on display at the convention hotel.
Below is a very well done O Scale layout. Rail is handlaid and is code 100 which is pretty small for O Scale.
The following photos are of a rather large HO layout. And yes two of these photos are of a castle. I have never seen a castle on a layout and it is very detailed and well done. In keeping with that theme the next two photos are a country village in England and one of the trains running was a British prototype I believe.
Thursday, October 10, 2013
Modeling Baltimore Transit - Sparrows Point - Bethlehem Steel - Bay Shore Park - Penn Station - Western Maryland Railway - Pennsylvania Railroad
Baltimore Transit Route 26 crossing Bear Creek into Sparrows Point and Bethlehem Steel Plant. |
"Other East Baltimore lines were sideshows to the main event: the heavy blue-collar No. 26 Sparrows Point line serving the big Bethlehem Steel mill and shipyard complex at "The Point" and it's bedroom communities of Dundalk and Turners Station. The mill was first developed in the remote southeastern corner of Baltimore's harbor in the later 1880s. In the mill's early days, workers either lived in the company town of Sparrows Point or rode to work on Pennsylvania Railroad local trains. The streetcar line across the flatlands and the wide Bear Creek estuary was completed in 1903; three years later it was extended beyond to Fort Howard and the Bay Shore Park."(Baltimore Streetcars-the Postwar Years by Herbert H. Harwood)
Saturday, September 21, 2013
CTC information. Below are two links to a nice explanation of how CTC will work on my layout.
Photos of Layout Tour sponsered by Mainline Hobby of Blue Ridge Summit, PA on 9/21/2013
Western Maryland Railway - Blue Ridge Div. Brian Wolfe
I was only able to visit three of the many layout sites that were available on Saturday and on Sunday.
This HO layout represents the Western Maryland Railway from Hagerstown, MD to York, PA in September 1970. It occupies a 30 x 45 basement, with a crew lounge, workshop, and dispatcher's office.
Waynecastle Central - Waynesboro Model Railroad Club.
This club has a large HO layout on the first floor, an N scale, a two rail O Scale, and a three rail O Gauge layouts on the second floor. Something for everyone. Generally open to the public at Christmas.
HO Under Renovation
N Scale
O Scale (2 rail) & O Gauge (3 rail)
The O Gauge layout features operational signals both three color and PRR position light signals.
Note Green Signal
Note Red Signal
Note PRR Stop signal
National Pike & Western Railroad - Dwight Sprecer
An HO layout based on the Western Maryland, Baltimore & Ohio, and the Norfolk & Western. This 470 sq. ft. layout features a 15 stall roundhouse, a shop area, and an Intermodal Facility.