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Nice solution. That shake would have derailed trains, no?
Dave, Very nice solution to a shaky problem I'm curious, what size hole saw are you using? Any chance of running a bolt up through your wood block and getting a nut on the top of it?
This update is for @Dave Vollmer and anyone else who has a HCD layout with banquet legs. As those folks know, banquet legs (especially when extended, as I did with electrical conduit) allow the table to shake, especially end-to-end. The slightest bump against the table is often the equivalent of a 10.0 earthquake. This problem was minimized when the extension was attached to the original layout, because the extension was screwed to the wall. Now that the extension is gone, the shimmy is back.So, while in Home Depot this afternoon looking for some hardware for another model railroading project, I came across some aluminum strips. So, it occurred to me that four strips could be used as angled braces, like that which you see on layouts built with wood benchwork. Since I have metal legs, though, I just needed to use some self-tapping metal screws. No problem.Here's a second shot a little more up the skirt. I glued some blocks to the underside of the HCD to secure the other ends of the aluminum strips. Two C-clamps give away the location of those blocks. I'm using C-clamps to help secure the blocks until the glue sets up, since it's not really possible to use screws to provide sufficient clamping power to the thin lauan surface of the HCD. Believe me, I tried.The table is rock-solid now, and I can still easily crawl under the layout when necessary. That's good, because I have some wiring to clean up under there.DFF
But, it was unnerving when my four-year-old daughter would come in the train room and try to swing around the table legs.
So wait. You tear it down to rebuild, but keep adding on