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Lee, although I have a great deal of respect for your opinions and talent, in this case I respectfully disagree with you. I would say that a successful layout is one that brings its owner enjoyment. The more enjoyment per pound of railroad, the better.I forget whether it was here or on another forum that there was a discussion of what gets modeled in various parts of the world. Here in the US, we usually strive to recreate the freight operations. The discussion above about the yard version of this extension tends to reinforce the idea that we consider this "normal" or the goal to strive for. In that context, a freight yard is a must. The yard is such a pivotal point in the functioning of the American freight railroad that without it, the layout seems incomplete. Contrast that with England, where the "normal" thing to do is to try to recreate the experience of being a tower operator. In other parts of the world, creating a virtual railfanning experience is the holy grail of the model railroad experience.I think this layout needs to fall into a "different strokes for different folks" category. If the staging yard represents off-layout destinations, what's wrong with the division yard being one of them? As Dave V mentioned, Doug Nelson has done a wonderful job creating a railfanning layout. There's no yard, but you can sit back and watch different trains roll through gorgeous scenery. There's a little bit of industry trackage to work if he gets the itch to switch, but that's not the focus of the layout. I for one would love to see the expansion to the JD support that kind of model railroad.
I just liked what I saw in the DKS track plan, and it shall be filed away for future reference... The small yard could become Hanover, and the JD could become the WM east sub...
You'll need to put a sound decoder in my N scale knee! >>PAFF!!<< followed by a string of obscenities!