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If you flip the loop you won't be lookinh down into the scene.
During the last discussion about my alternate history, I began to realize just how long it’s going to be, and what an uphill climb it’s going to be to before I break ground on 2.0. At the same time, the pull of the narrow gauge has been having an effect on me.......It’s grown quite a bit. It’s no longer an HCD, but rather a full 4x8 sheet of plywood. This was a proof of concept draft, and it proves that it can be done in the space I have. It definitely cannot go any bigger, since even at this size, it would mean one of the short ends gets butted up against a wall, and it might not make sense to do Idaho Springs. I’m not sure if I’m actually going to build this bad boy, but there’s definite potential, especially if I can work out a way to make it less than 8’ long.
I like the way you introduced the grades but if I understand this correctly, at this point I have to wonder what the point is of using a 4x8 sheet of plywood, or a flat sheet of anything? The setting is all about vertical scenery and trains on hillsides and rocky cliffs and canyons and it will require some kind of open framing to support all that, above and below the tracks. Perhaps the 4x8 sheet is just an imaginary boundary within which the 3D design is bound, but then I have to ask, why a 4x8 and not some other convenient shape and dimension? Maybe instead of a 4x8, it’s four individually framed sections bolted together? 4x8’s are awfully clumsy...just sayin’...Have fun!Otto K.
I meant that the size was a 4x8 sheet of plywood, drawing the comparison to a minimalist HO layout. The thought of building it such that each of the four scenes come off is definitely in my mind. Just being able to take the Loop outside and use it as a photo diorama would make it worth it.
Very nice, but a little more like this: