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There's a joke in there somewhere... I'm just not seeing it.
In the continuing theme of "what should I do with my basement", here's another alternative take.This is a layout based on Conrail's "Reading Cluster" that they inherited from the Reading (and a few other anthracite roads) and eventually sold off to the Reading and Northern.I'm calling it the "Tudor Branch" because originally it was designed to fit on two doors (although that changed early on).Here's some inspiration: http://conrailphotos.thecrhs.org/OnLocationWithConrail/HardCoalCountry. I know, the thumbnails aren't working right now, but the map version is handy: http://conrailphotos.thecrhs.org/OnLocationWithConrail/HardCoalCountry/mapThe general idea is... two different jobs work out of West Cressona yard: one to St Nick and one to the other industries. The St Nick job handles the anthracite traffic to both the St Nick breaker (well, the remnants of it) and Blaschak Coal as well as the Goodspring Branch. The other handles the two other industries.I may add a little more to it too since this is a just a first draft. I really like the idea of adding the grain thing at Weigh Scales (gotta send those new ScaleTrains hoppers somewhere...).Here's the plan. The red lines are walls. The green line is the access area to laundry and the stairs. It can be occupied by people but not layout. (Attachment Link) I love the fact that it's almost ALL run with SW1500s and MP15DCs.
Ok... try this: keep the tables where they are, but rotate the track counterclockwise until your WC Yard is straight along the long left side of the table. Then relocate your other industries until they make positional and are aesthetically pleasing. Then stare at it until you spot things that would annoy you, fix those, then grab your tools and start building.
... but only if you absolutely insist on building a stupid island layout.
Does this one fall into that category?
Dave,Do you ever miss that layout? I know you've stated in another thread that you no longer desired to work in N scale. But it was one heck of a layout, one that I admired greatly. What would your plan be if you still had to be mobile? Switching layout in HO or HOn3? I'm faced with the need to be portable for a while yet. I bounce between a tabletop N layout and an HO shelf switcher. Love the switching but miss the option for continuous operation when the mood strikes.
Ed, have you considered the around the wall approach?If you do go that route, how will that interfere with your other basement hobby?
That falls into the category of what you do when you get military orders every 18-36 months and have no idea what room size you'll have next. Last I checked, Ed doesn't get PCS orders and he just moved into that house.