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But I doubt you will get the modeling community to agree to some standardized set of terms,
I like the white bead foam myself
What I'm saying is I think it would be helpful to have some hobby-wide standards, guides, recommendations, about benchwork -- us old geezers who know it all and have tried every technique may not think it practical, but for people starting into the hobby it would be so much better if they didn't have to find out by trial and error, and faultily-built layouts, how to build decent, proven benchwork, once they realize that setting up on the floor or the kitchen table ain't gonna cut it anymore.
I'm actually tired of having half a RR mag article about somebody's layout being what kind of benchwork, materials, and construction style he used... I could read Carpentry Today for that stuff.
I read every source I could find, but still stumbled randomly onto things I hadn't known about.
Why not? There are standards for wheel flanges, track gauge, coupler heights, and rail dimensions. There are standards for DCC decoders. The are standards for what constitutes late steam, transition era, Amtrak era, modern era. There are even standards to determine what type of benchwork construction. Why not classifications as to weight and portability? I understand you see no reason to personally and that's fine, but if there had been some kind of standardized resource as to ease of construction, types of base, bracing, properties of materials and the like, I wouldn't have had to keep rebuilding layouts every time I discovered a much better way of doing them -- usually a technique or material that had been readily available all along. And was always into model railroading -- I read every source I could find, but still stumbled randomly onto things I hadn't known about. We have people who nitpick to death rolling stock with too thick door guides or foobie paint schemes, yet this hobby doesn't have some well-known, standardized data source for building layouts. Every book on the subject has the preferences, emphasis. and personal experience of the builder built in. I'm actually tired of having half a RR mag article about somebody's layout being what kind of benchwork, materials, and construction style he used -- I want info on the layout design and considerations about what kind of railroad operations influenced the track design. I could care less if it's a stainless steel arch-beam suspension system or piles of bricks the scenery is sitting on. I could read Carpentry Today for that stuff.What I'm saying is I think it would be helpful to have some hobby-wide standards, guides, recommendations, about benchwork -- us old geezers who know it all and have tried every technique may not think it practical, but for people starting into the hobby it would be so much better if they didn't have to find out by trial and error, and faultily-built layouts, how to build decent, proven benchwork, once they realize that setting up on the floor or the kitchen table ain't gonna cut it anymore.
Okay,get to work..Let us know what you come up with...
I'm actually tired of having half a RR mag article about somebody's layout being what kind of benchwork, materials, and construction style he used -- I want info on the layout design and considerations about what kind of railroad operations influenced the track design. I could care less if it's a stainless steel arch-beam suspension system or piles of bricks the scenery is sitting on. I could read Carpentry Today for that stuff.
You're joking, right?!I know that I for one would welcome more details about how the layout is constructed. Others have similar opinion. Here is a related excerpt from a letter I sent to the N scale Magazine (which ended up publishing it in the Sept/Oct issue).... I also find most of the articles featuring model layouts lacking in a similar way. While it is nice to see well-composed photos of the scenery on a layout, I would also love to see photos of other parts of the layouts, very seldom shown. To me, it would be very beneficial and informative to see how the layout's fascia and control panels are constructed. I would even go further and show photos of the the lighting fixtures and for that really "behind the scenes" look, it would be great to even have a look "under the skirt" of the featured layout. I realize that some layout owners would rather not show such intimate details of their layouts, but I suspect that most owners wouldn't mind showing off at least the fascia or control panels.I don't think that I'm the only person who would find photos of those technical details as interesting as the scenery. In the past, I have posted such photos on a online forum, to supplement a magazine article featuring my friend's layout ( http://forum.atlasrr.com/forum/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=52943 ). The forum members applauded me for posting all those "behind the scenes" photos.BTW, The layout I mentioned uses L-girder construction, with most of the flat track and scenery supporting areas constructed using 1/4 Lauan plywood. The layout has been around for over 20 years and it still operates as good as it did the 1st time we ran trains. The track work is close to perfect, and the operations are quite reliable. Many seasoned H0 operators who operate on Ernie's layout often comment about how smoothly trains run on his layout. "Better than many H0 layouts", they say. The L-girders are also quite lightweight. I can easily lift the entire leg of the layout from the floor if needed. Personally, I think that heavy plywood on home layouts (especially in N scale) is an unnecessary overkill.
I would think you'd cringe looking under most railroads.To most people I know,benchwork & wiring is just an annoyance that's necessary to get their trains running.And also about as far as they get,LOL!!!