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It's funny Jimmy from DIY & Digital Railroad just did a video on "Gatekeepers" in the hobby and how not to be one, and there is a lot of gatekeepers here.
One lesson I have learned over my years is to challenge gatekeeping no matter where you find it. It is a behavior that is used to protect something - revenue streams, ego, position etc. - and its goals are to create artificial levels of status , lock people out and stifle change unless it’s change the gatekeepers deem valuable to them.One can understand how gatekeeping might arise in billion dollar industries. But in model railroading? Come on.Gotta run. I think I am going to plan a TTrack module of a railroad connecting Mos Eisley to Anchorhead.Rob
Hmmm, "challenge" sounds more like "gate-keeping" the hobby's so-called "gate keepers." An interesting idea. But what makes your gate keeping more righteous or valid than theirs?
Honestly, this might end up being the motivation for me to build one.
Actually that's the case for all modular layouts to some extent . there are exceptions where clubs have specific standards, and I suspect some also have work sessions to coordinate scenery etc ..
Maybe I should have been more clear… the challenge is NOT about building my own gate, it’s about making room for whatever creativity may evolve without artificial limitations.I have no desire to create a self-deluded fantasy where what I like should somehow be a standard. There is nothing righteous about it.I think that’s why I can find equal appreciation for the art of a person who creates in incredible N-scale prototype layout as I can for the joyous racket of a 3-rail O scale empire or the squared-off world of a Lego layout. It’s all art.And if I see a layout or module that doesn’t speak to me personally, I move on. It’s no different than paintings in a gallery; you can spend hours in front of the ones that you connect with, and you walk past the ones that you don’t.There is beauty in all corners of this wonderful hobby. Gates block the view.
Could always do a "Proto TTrak" group. TTrak but for the more prototype oriented modeler.
I don't have any interest in building TTrak module or joining a TTrak set up/club/group, but I've often wondered about a Proto TTrak system. If this would ever arise, what kind of standards would there be?For example, would there be a minimum radii be applied?A different type of track?If any of this was addressed, then how far would one be from getting away from the original concept of TTrak?Would it be better to just start a new system with newer standards but follow the basic idea of two track modules, be that Unitrack or more traditional track like Altas C55?
At the moment I don't have a reason to be working in TTrak but I'm coming around on the idea.
The key is recognizing when my style of gate-keeping might be inadvertently pinching someone else's fingers.🙂