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Yeah, but if people who aren't fans of those things don't contribute, then those are all that will be there.I guess one of my underlying assumptions of mine in this thread is that folks understand the desire to be the change you want to see in the world.
Well, that's a good point, certainly is. Raise the bar, so to speak. But in a way that inspires, of course.I echo what Dave V. says too.
Love that Ed.My mind's already now scheming on a Pennsy electrified loop in TTrak. I kept some of my N scale Pennsy FWIW.
I realized a third reason T-TRAK is not my cup o' tea - the minimum module. Our club's T-TRAK folks don't go over-the-top on anything, but the assembled layout is still a cluttered mismatch of scenelets. Looking at the pictures presented in this thread... OMG... unintelligible, non-cohesive clutter out the wazoo.The four-foot module established by N-Trak makes sense. Each module can be effectively viewed as a scene unto itself, and from the observer's standpoint, there is no visual interference from adjacent modules ('cept over-the-top attention getters). One-footers? No, there are always the adjacent modules in your peripheral view.
A club could fix that - specify that at the interface it has to be flat, use a standard ballast to hide the unitrak, etc .. and encourage module builders to make scenes based on some real scene .. that also fits a railroad theme ..
EXACTLY.It's why I built these, to see how far I could go. (Attachment Link) The answer? Pretty f'ing far.
This photo of some modules at the National Train Show posted on MRH stirred up a hornet's nesthttps://forum.mrhmag.com/post/2023-national-train-show-day-1-friday-8252023-12722540
That’s exactly what we did in our club. All had to use the same ground foam on the edges that will tough other modules, the same ballast, and the same sky boards that we painted as a group. We also decided on mid to late 50s in Appalachia and try to make the structures not look so old they would look out of place in the 1970s. We usually have 30’-40’ of modules when we setup. One thing we have done to try to keep the youngsters at bay is to use a pair of tables in the place of 1 so that the layout sits a little back from the edge. We haven’t had many issues with little hands on the layout.
Honestly, this might end up being the motivation for me to build one.I fundamentally believe people--even non-railfans--respond more to realistic things that look like things they've seen (or might have seen in another era) versus the fantasy stuff or the poorly executed stuff.
One thing we have done to try to keep the youngsters at bay is to use a pair of tables in the place of 1 so that the layout sits a little back from the edge. We haven’t had many issues with little hands on the layout.
@AlkemScaleModels has talked about doing a Proto-TTRAK setup at the next MARPM event and I wanted to see what interest there might be around here in contributing to it.I've started working on adapters to allow us to use better looking track (Atlas 55, ME 55 and 70, etc...) on modules from end to end by allowing the track to use the critical part of TTRAK: Unijoiners. I was curious to see if I'm answering a question that nobody was asking or if I just invented something better than sliced bread. (Attachment Link) (Attachment Link) (Attachment Link)