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I'll take sticky, uniformly painted end plates over sporadic flashes of bare wood here and there when modules of different width are paired.
You also might want to have some signs that say, "YES, THIS IS N SCALE!" as "Is this N Gauge?" will be the #1 question asked the whole weekend
Our first public show is NEXT WEEKEND!
Robyn and I were seriously discussing a trek this weekend just to see the layout. We like Omaha, it having been a frequent destination for my job. If it wasn't for the harsh winters we'd likely have retired there.But this time, no. Unfortunately, the way we do road trips - relaxed, with stops to railfan - it is a full day's travel each way. Three days away aren't in the cards this month, considering we have our own GTE in two weeks to prepare for.
Wrapping up the last of my pre-show checklist! I can't wait to see trains roaming through these gorgeous curves! ...
We have several modules that have tracks at a curve/angle over a section joint:...The trick is to lay the track after you've pinned and clamped the sections together, and then use a very very thin blade (like the Dedeco separating disc) to cut the track, because you CANNOT use the spacer-between-sections trick to compensate for blade thickness when the track is curved/at angle.(Ask me how I know )...