0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Pretty ambitious plan. Good luck.
That's one of the things that has the little voice in the back of my head talking to me and a reason to post the idea on here. I don't want to get 1/2 way into a partial double deck layout and find myself wishing I'd thought things through better.Peter
I think it was Lee who said in relation to his former pike, "It was a mistake trying to stuff 10lbs of model railroad into a 5lb bag" or something to that affect.
Indeed. My first thought is, how many people will it take to effectively run this layout? Do you anticipate having that many willing warm bodies available for ops? To my untrained eye, it sure looks like much more than a one-man show, and it would be a crying shame to see such a handsome effort sit idle.
I give you a lot of credit for that Peter.And I haven't even touched upon the maintenance for a monster you're contemplating... And there will be maintenance issues.I love the scope that you have, but do you need something that large and complex in order to enjoy the hobby? That's the key question. If you do, then go at it with gusto and full speed ahead I say!
I haven't commented up until now because I was trying to get time to sit down with the plan to figure out it's schematic. But I haven't done so yet, partly because it's complicated. I think it would be very helpful to have that in place before you worry about detailed track layout. ...Of course, I love the concept you have for a contemporary western pike with the types of industries you have. It's an idea you should have no trouble developing into a real railroad. To help you refine your plans, think about what kind of geography and traffic really appeals to you. If you are fond of manifest traffic vs. intermodal, I would recommend something patterned after the Oregon Trunk Line which connects the east-west BNSF lanes in Washington to the north-south UP lanes in California, and hosts mostly manifest trains. You could do a freelance inspired by the traffic patterns on this line, and the range of scenery it spans is awesome: from mid-altitude Sierra forests in the south, to Ponderosa Pine forests in southern Oregon, to lava beds in central Oregon, to rolling golden wheat fields near the Columbia. Here is a nice map I ran across yesterday that shows the contemporary division points on the BNSF in the PNW, including the OT:http://www.bnsf.com/customers/pdf/maps/div_nw.pdfWhen I look at that map, I see opportunities for: interesting connections at either end; trackage rights over the UP's Klammath sub in the middle (with its I-5 intermodal traffic); and at least two branches that could be operated as short lines, like the City of Prineville Ry. What I don't see in this part of the world is a paper mill... Of course you would have to massively compress this scheme, but that is a perennial challenge.
P.S. I agree with the others that this plan is ambitious, but I think a pike the size you drew is not crazy. A decent metric to consider is complexity, which, roughly speaking, is total number of turnouts. The long stretches of mainline you have around a room are quite nice and relatively easy to build and maintain. It's when you start adding complex branches, hidden track, or large switching districts, that things can get bogged down to the point that you never want to enter the basement... You might want to think about modeling the mainlines and staging first, while leaving hooks in place for a branch or two later.
I love building scenery. Period. The variety you describe in Oregon is intriguing, but the lack of industry along that route is a concern. I need to find a decent city/town to locate the layout. I've struggled with that, as nothing seems to quite fit. I wind up with one end of the imagined line going off into no mans land where making money running trains would be tough.
You have roughly a 20x23 space. One thing to consider is your benchwork flow. I think you mentioned that you are essentially building this by your self. You've got a lot of flowing benchwork there that might be rather hard to build by yourself.
I have a space that's half as wide as yours, so for me, it really was too much for the space, especially if I had a number of guys in the aisleways. One way to figure that out is I've been using roughly 30"x15" ovals (could go to 30x20) and placing them around the layout at various operator points to see, one if they'd fit and two where there might be operators on top of each other that could cause issues during operating sessions. Just some food for thought,Phil