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That was in 2001…A lot has happened since then…Also, T-TRAK wiki, although a decent site, is not the optimum site to get ideas, info, and history.Rather, go to the source… www.nrail.orgFormerly NTRAK.orgAnyone who was present at Altoona last weekend saw some incredible prototype modeling on T-TRAK modules.
Time. I already don't have enough time to do what I need to do in my hobby, let alone the things I want to do.
Sure, some of those people will probably become "serious" modelers, but you have to get them involved in the hobby first.
Obviously there are still major misconceptions about T-TRAK.“It’s designed to get kids into the hobby” …? Who started that one?A Free-MoN guy told me that one couldn’t model above track or below track scenery in T-TRAK.Small radius? Only if you stick with the original (2001) Kato 11” and 13” radius corners.We use large radius (19”) curves for corners, endcaps, and junctions now. 80’ body mount cars? No problem.How’s this for above and below the track scenery in T-TRAK?
This module was at Altoona last weekend. It remains one of the better executed ones I’ve seen. For one thing the trees scale. If this is what the right counters are opposed to they need to think about what they perceive our hobby to be.
You can absolutely plug that trestle module into a regular T-TRAK layout.Jaime Valdez (the builder) does just that.In fact, the module is ‘standard’ quad length.Again, far too many don’t know enough about T-TRAK or the ‘standards’. The only real ‘standards’ concern module wiring and interface with adjacent modules. The same with T-TRAK layouts. Apparently, many here seem to believe that T-TRAK layouts must be arranged in an oval (back-to-back) on single tables…we rarely configure layouts like that, and, at most, only create peninsulas off of the main layout, using back-to-back configurations, for visual or operational interests.
Which hobby? Star Wars, Smurfs, Legos, haunted castles, unicorns and rainbows, UFOs? All, combinations of all, and even worse can be found masquerading as "model railroading" on TTrak modules. Not to mention the toylike appearance of Unitrack, no spiral easements or compound curves, and shiny rail with trains chasing their tails.
If this is what's supposed to attract people to the hobby of scale model railroading, then time to start giving thought to how an obituary for the hobby will read. Let's try "Killed by dumbing down."
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