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@Missaberoad - it's great to be back! We are in the Calgary area so explorations are more focused on Kananaskis and the Ghost River areas, but I'll get up to the Grande Cache area soon. Still lots of snow in the bush up there.
The Railwire is not your personal army.
Nice. We are in the Olds/Sundre area so our stomping grounds is between Ghost River and Ram Falls usually. Hoping to head north of hw16 this summer tho, one of our lockdown vacation plans. The drive south of Canmore on 742 thru Peter Lougheed park is well worth checking out BTW... Very pretty country!
That damn electrical box...how high is its top?
You indicated the 2 yards ended up next to each other… I assume on different levels? If so, you might want to consider a mushroom arrangement where one yard is worked from one side of the mushroom and the other yard worked from the opposite side. Don’t know if you can pull that off, but if you can flip the layout to put the yards next to those posts, you have the support structure already in place.
About 6'- it really precludes anything on the wall there. I wish they would centralize utilities in these houses. This is such a random location for the electrical. Moving it though is expensive and would result in a lot of junction boxes. We'll have to work around it.
Agreed, I get it. Too bad, because the outside walls are your best opportunity to max out the run.Food for thought: some years ago I designed a Cajon layout for a friend that had one of its “hidden” staging yards, with a return loop, at 72”, high above his division yard, see sketch below. Its fascia formed a valance, with trains staged behind it. A long, visible grade up to it, trains disappear up high in a cut, or a summit tunnel. A cheapie camera to monitor trains in staging, access when needed on a step stool. My own upper end staging is at 75” in an adjacent garage, see pic. Works great.You could consider putting your upper end staging over the electrical box, run a long grade along the top wall (top in original drawing) all the way to the bathroom wall, loop back on a turn back curve and drop down to a comfortable elevation to the rest of the layout? You could do some big mountain backdrops on the wall behind the grade and the modeled scenery could be spectacular... Like I said, food for thought...fun stuff!Otto
Did you post a plan with both levels? The one I saw on page 1 only showed 1 level, or I could only depict track locations for 1 level. Or is the second level all staging?
Thanks for the suggestion Otto, that is something that might be possible and would use the space well. Staging will be a key part of making this work and I like the idea of having it visible with a configuration like that.