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Not sure how I missed this before, but what a fantatsic looking layout! The trackwork in this last shot looks superb and the hilly scenery is really coming along nicely. I'm not sure how you can stand not living in the same house as your layout though... Do you get many chances to operate it these days? Please keep the updates coming.
I have one thing to say about the engine house. If all you need is a place for engines to lay over, just do what the real railroads would do and leave it open. It's a better way to show off the collection, and something much less "model railroadey".
Hafta agree with Ed, unless its an actual engine terminal, or repair point, nobody in the last 20 years uses an engine house that small unless its a 1 or 2 engine short line
... Does the fact that the engine tracks even exist seem "model railroadey"? ...
Another one that just stumbled on this thread...I really like what I'm seeing, it's first-rate modeling underway. I also think you're focusing on what really matters - color, texture, density.... not ribs and rivets. The scene evolution to photos is very, very good.The scenery I have to do around Winslow is not unlike what you've got. Similar problems with a rather faded color, low brush/sage, earth colors critical.Many modelers get nervous using photo backdrops because it makes their foreground model work look bad by comparison. I don't think you have that problem. At this point, the 'blue' showing up between the distant hills is actually more distracting than a photo backdrop might be, and it looks like you have the skills and materials to do it. If you just do the hills from photos - cut out the sky parts - to establish a distant hill line, I think you'd be surprised how good it might really look. The bugger is always a printed sky, so just cut that off with an Xacto knive and paint the paper edge to match the hill color, looks great.I'll also second the comment about enginehouses. What 'looks like' an enginehouse (blue and white two-track pre-engineered structure) at Winslow from the air is actually a light car repair shop. Power is always left outside. Doesn't change the building much, just the purpose. You can get dimensions from Google Earth on many of these now. What you're building very closely resembles the car shop in Winslow.You might also want to closely study fueling facilities; I've had a real ball with mine because ATSF changed the ones at Winslow about six times, both in hardware and location. Lots of really nice detail, and the fuel jacks and sand towers from AMI are pretty darn close, all I had to add was a whole lot of overhead piping. That's a good place to 'park' power pending use.