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I may have missed it, but are you still planning a dual-era pike? That sounds really tough to pull off, especially for a traveling layout.
I'm still on the fence about it. I discuss the issue here.
Dual era seems to me would be very hard to pull off in an urban setting...
Of course, there would still be some small areas that constitute "leaks" (such as the ends where the track curves around), and these would need to be handled in such a way that they worked for either era.It's a tempting challenge to me, so I'm still considering it.
Actually, I think an urban setting makes it easier. A solid row of buildings makes an ideal view block. With a backdrop that encloses three sides, visibility is well controlled; rotate the layout 180, and the other era is visible. Of course, there would still be some small areas that constitute "leaks" (such as the ends where the track curves around), and these would need to be handled in such a way that they worked for either era.It's a tempting challenge to me, so I'm still considering it.
David if there's anyone on the planet that can pull this off- it's you (well maybe M.C. Fujiwara as well). Stop considering- rip the challenge to pieces and blow us all away with your (already demonstrated) creativity.
Not this. Too gimmicky. Don't do it.
On the other hand it could be quite magical, and if you really don't mind restricting sight lines, my points are moot.
I'll be honest, I'm not a big fan unless you swap the structures too. I just don't think it'll make much sense. Half the time the train will be anachronistic with the scenery it's rolling through.
To me, I think limiting the viewing angles is too high a price to pay for the extra era. But it's hard to tell for sure without trying it.