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Thanks for the compliments everyone. Detailing,painting, and weathering are my favorite aspects of the hobby. I really do need to get a layout started though.Bob
But then you will be spending your hobby time on building the layout, not on super-weathering rolling stock. There are always tradeoffs. I never started my layout (and most likely never will) because all my hobby time is already taken up by lots of projects.
You make an awfully good point there, Pete. I look at my growing pile of rolling stock and undec. locos and begin wondering if I'll live long enough, the typical modelers dilemma. This fall I started building a grain elevator diorama and have spent about two months on it so far and still have a ways to go. How do some of these guys get such beautiful large layouts built? I guess there's always Unitrack for me.
How do people build large layouts? From my personal experience I can say that those people usually go for quantity vs. superdetailing. Or another way is to find several friends who share their interest and build the layout as a team. I belong to such group of people. 5 of us together, on Thursday nights for several years build a decent layout. Each person has their specialty (some like trackwork, others electronics, yet another person might like to do scenery or superdetailing models). Combined you have a team of people that can do a really good job building a layout.