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Do you guys think I should have a bridge pier in the middle of the two inline truss bridges? Until today, I assumed I would have one, but I was just considering if not having a pier would look believable.Bruce- since you seem to have knowledge of structural engineering, can you advise as to what would be more prototypical for a Northern California truss bridge (~230'): should I run a center pier, and no connecting upper cross member (between the two bridge spans)? Or, should I use the connecting piece, and no pier -as if it were a single span?
Mark- yeah. i think i've come to the conclusion to keep the pier, and lose the upper cross member.I did build similar abutments using "classroom" flooring tile. It looks okay in this picture, but I feel like I made the bricks way too big to be realistic.
Thank you for the correction. It appears "bridge shoe" is in common use only in the model railroading community, I guess similar to the mistakenly used "turnout" to describe a prototype switch.md
That looks pretty good to me although the ledge the bridge end is sitting on seems pretty deep. I would think the ledge might be just a couple of scale feet deep...just enough to accommodate the bridge bearings ("shoes" ). And don't' forget to add those!nice workmd
Ian- the anchor cement one is exactly what I had in mind for my layout. Can you elaborate a bit more on how you created that abutment?And thank you all for your contributions! They've all been very helpful.-Noah