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I agree. But then again, it's Dave's layout. If there's still interest in the version with the engine facilities and new smaller yard, I must note there were some serious flaws in the plan (such as the need for locos to use the mainline to access the yard ). So here's a version with the major gaffes corrected. As a minor bonus, in the process of making the revisions, some acreage was gained for the town and industries. (For giggles I also included the connection to the yard lead that allows turning locos and cars--highlighted in red.)
Having the run-around and switching track between the mains and the station is a bit awkward for me. I would see if there's a way to move the station to the mains and the run-around behind.
The thing for me is, though, I'm not a yard nut. Yes, it's fun now and then to make up a train, but I don't see myself being like Ed with respect to really putting a yard through its paces. It's easy to get overwhelmed trying to account for every operational possibility in a small yard. Looking at Lee's old Hagerstown yard, I see more than twice the real estate and a real sense of purpose. After all, look at how much more operating potential Lee's WM had versus the JD. It made sense to have an operational yard feeding an operational layout.The JD on the other had spends the vast majority of its time as my railfanning time machine and nothing more. And that's okay, because most of the time that's all I want to do with it. When I get the itch to op, I can do a little local work.From this perspective the right yard for the JD is a nice, long run-through staging yard from which I can queue representative samples of the PRR's 1950s traffic.
Do you have a parts list compiled by chance, would it be possible to annotate what turnouts are what on the plan? Overall dimensions would be?
Some of you can look at a trackplan the way I look at a higher order partial differential equation...
Dave. Don't fear the ops possibilities. Embrace them. In my opinion, a successful layout has a little staging, a workable yard, some main line running preferably with a continuous running option... (Martini Time Express, I call it), and a little local work to give it all some play value. The plan shown immediately above, and Michael's analysis of the operation, is perfect. Reduce the main line to single track with a couple of long sidings, and you have even more operating interest.The thing to keep in mind regarding yards is that they are not for storage of trains... including the staging tracks... The staging tracks represent destinations, just like the various industrial sidings on the layout are destinations. The active yard is where you sort the cars to send them to their destinations, whether that's "on stage" at an industry, or "off stage" to a staging track.Lee