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Very nice track plan and execution, Christian. Performance was flawless.
For the sake of reference I found the original article in the July 2000 issue of model railroader "the San Jose central"
I'll have to see if I have that issue; would like to know more about "my" track plan. See how they intended it, and see where my ideas differed from their's.
The Railwire is not your personal army.
http://mrv.trains.com/-/media/Files/PDF/Marketing/5easytrackplans.pdf
If you don't have it PM me your email.
Thank you. I will send it, but if it's the same thing as posted above I won't trouble you.
With the several vintage trains I was able to acquire over the weekend, I'm thinking about building micro layouts to accommodate the trains rather than building trains to run on a layout! Thanks for the inspiration!Lee
No problem. Remember, this is (almost) all vintage track, so that itch can definitely be scratched with minimal effort. The problem is you start one and your brain starts to wander to "but what if I add this?"
And thats how you end up with oddball layouts with fun but unorthodox track plans.
You think that's odd? Originally we were going to replace all of the crossovers with double-slips for the sole reason that we could, but as it looked more and more like we were building an actual layout, we settled on making it a little more practical. Also designed; a big circle made of switches, and an N track module that looked more like interlocking and would be like rolling the dice for where your train ended up.
huh, guess you got a point there. How are those old double slips btw, the radii looks a bit extreme.