Author Topic: Chicago Crossing  (Read 3497 times)

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Ed Kapuscinski

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Re: Chicago Crossing
« Reply #30 on: May 16, 2024, 01:01:03 AM »
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Welcome to the fray @ChicagoCrossingMRR . I hope you’re not put off by the cavalcade of “better model railroading through peer pressure”, lol.

I’m hoping you’ll stick around long enough to start breaking Lees chops.

Any chance you’re coming to the N Scale Convention in June.

ChicagoCrossingMRR

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Re: Chicago Crossing
« Reply #31 on: May 16, 2024, 10:06:46 AM »
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@basementcalling thank you Peter!

@Ed Kapuscinski hilarious - I hope that's one of the taglines that pops up on the left side of the page.

Unfortunately I won't be out for the convention given a bunch of travel obligations for work. Looks like it'll be a blast though.

Eric

Ed Kapuscinski

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Re: Chicago Crossing
« Reply #32 on: May 16, 2024, 10:53:54 AM »
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@basementcalling thank you Peter!

@Ed Kapuscinski hilarious - I hope that's one of the taglines that pops up on the left side of the page.

Unfortunately I won't be out for the convention given a bunch of travel obligations for work. Looks like it'll be a blast though.

Eric
Who needs a job, blow em off! Lol

If you can't make that I'd also highly recommend the September Altoona N Scale Weekend. It's also a blast.

ChicagoCrossingMRR

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Re: Chicago Crossing
« Reply #33 on: May 16, 2024, 10:13:10 PM »
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Ha! I do (at least for the next two decades or so)  :D

Thanks for the heads-up about the Altoona weekend. Blocked it on my calendar!



Maletrain

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Re: Chicago Crossing
« Reply #34 on: May 17, 2024, 10:03:28 AM »
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ChicagoCrossingMRR, glad to see you here on TRW.  Looking forward to seeing your posts about techniques.

Regarding making tracks disappear, I see prototype tunnels in all sorts of situations that aren't really "mountains".  It is really just a matter of whether it is cheaper to make a tunnel than a cut, and maybe a bridge. 

So, for instance, there is the B&O mainline tunnel at Point of Rocks where the mainline goes through a tunnel in one direction and, only feet away, around the rock point in the other direction, where the old C&O Canal bed used to be.  The rock is stable enough to make a tunnel feasible.  There is a tunnel through a hill on the old B&O Georgetown branch at Dalecarlia, with a roadway above.  Similarly, there is a tunnel for a branch line in PA where the PA Turnpike goes over the hill and the train goes through the hill. 

I even worked in a building, named "The Air Rights Building" where the builder of a multi-story office building won a legal battle to cantilever the building out over the tracks of the B&O Georgetown Branch (which has now become a "rails-to-trails" bike path).

For my own layout planning, where the location is actually mountainous, I am still planning to have one end of the mainline tracks disappear around a bend that follows a river around a hill, rather than going into a tunnel.  But, the other end will come out of a tunnel, because staging needs head room, and it is very close.