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Agreed on the high quality of Chris' handlaid trackwork, but someone might want to pick up the tornado damage blocking the tracks.
Or the drunk that's passed out on the depot platform.
OK the team track ramp/dock is glued up and drying now. Thinking about the line poles. A few pages back I showed a photo with 7 arm poles, but this is the road I live on:Down across the river and round the bend I might do 3 arm poles. And on the other busy side of the layout I'll do 6 or 7 arm poles.Also picked 9" spacing of the poles and set pins around the layout to make sure I didn't run into an area where a pole just wouldn't fit. So far it worked out.
I wouldn't go much more than 80' between poles, or ~6" in N. I couple two boxcars together and roll them around to set the distance.
So studying these and other photos I see in busier areas there are more arms on the poles, less in rural areas. So I whipped up some 5 arm poles by splicing Atlas poles.
Forty poles per mile used to be a very common standard, and steam era engineers were trained to gauge speed by counting poles. Speedometers were nonexistent or extremely rare, but they all had accurate watches.(Ten poles in 30 seconds = 30mph, etc.) That would translate to 132' between poles, or not quite 10" in N scale.So much for the prototype. On layouts, where we tend to shrink many things, shortening the dimension a bit makes sense to create an illusion of greater distance, and to accommodate tight curves. But this becomes a matter of personal preference given a particular setting. My gut tells me that 6" is too close, but that's me, and this is about opinions. I generally use 8" on my mainline, but Chris' 9" spacing looks fine to me, as does the rest of the layout.Otto K.
This isn't the best photo but gives an idea of the model scene. (Attachment Link)