0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic.
I wholeheartedly agree to DO IT! This is my favorite railfanning location and I loosely (and I mean loosely) based my club module of this location. Although it's not TTraK it can be seen here. https://www.therailwire.net/forum/index.php?topic=42393.msg534254#msg534254@robert3985 models Echo canyon which is just up the line like 15 or so miles. I'll be watching this thread with much interest!
Jbub, love your module set. That's a great representation of that area. Never seen it in person myself, but it sure looks like what I see in videos from those who railfan the area. Tell me more about that kitbashed short truss bridge you did. Love the mini look compared to the longer ones. Is that an Atlas you shortened?Lee, thanks for the link to Roy's videos. I've seen a bunch of his, but I thought he focused more on Green River than Echo canyon. I must have missed that. I know he has been reworking his layout.Ed, wanna make some trees? For Utah, it wouldn't have to be one a day to cover a TTrak module.I am hoping @robert3985 chimes in. He's the resident expert on this area of the railroad universe, and his modeling is amazing.I've got ripped plywood in the basement to do double wide frames, but wondering if buying module kits would be worth it for triples. Probably lighter, though if I go off specs for track locations in between set ends, the predrilled hole locations for track screws would not be needed.Any thoughts on the pros and cons of using a 180 turnback curve vs the 1 outside large radius module and inside corner arrangement that matches the prototype track flow? The latter would certainly give viewers the feel of pacing a train while on the interstate, but most people in Virginia have never done that in Utah.
Technically speaking, Taggart is in Weber Canyon and Echo canyon is further up the line. The small Echo creek drains into the Weber river and the confluence of the two is at Echo, UT which is where the former Park City branch began. Echo is still used today as a grain car loading site for the local farmers. As far as the bridges are concerned. The small deck girder is a Kato bridge that I removed the Kato track from an laid either Micro Engineering or Atlas C55 track on. The bridge next to is is a C55 Atlas truss bridge and the last one is a Central Valley Models 150' truss bridge. Thanks for the praise on the look of the module. I'm redoing some of the rock work on it and still have no water poured. Hopefully one day it will. I do have trees now and that area is interesting. The north facing slopes have a lot of pine and some scrub oak and a fair bit of deciduous along the river. The south facing slopes don't have much of anything tree wise. Mostly grasses, brush and some small patches of scrub oak. When you model the river, maker sure you get a little ramp and people in tubes and kayaks since Taggart is the collecting point for the river tube rides that start up river.
@Jbub, in some of the Google Map images you can see tubers and kayakers on the river. It's got a few class III rapids, so even though it's a tiny stream a couple of the rapids mean business. Supposedly it has trout in it too, but I imagine it gets fished pretty hard being in such close proximity to the interstate. Kayaking and fishing are what eat into my modeling time as much as work. They are my other two passions besides trains. Maybe one day I'll kayak railfan Weber canyon. Water level perspectives on trains are cool.@robert3985 do you know if anyone has done 3d prints of the tunnel portals or has drawings? Getting those right would be key to the look of the scene. One version of the idea in my head was an L shaped TTRAK module similar in shape, but obviously smaller, than your module drawing.