This is an excellent question the OP has posed, and it deserves a serious response...which means a LONG response, so here goes...
I'm wanting to start building some module to some standard. I like aspects of all three of the standards I mentioned.
oNeTrack has a single track main which seems more realistic for most of the US
T-Track uses Unitrack at least for the edge connectors, which in my opinion is brilliant
FreemoN is more free form which I don't necessarily need.
I think what I really want is a combination of oNeTrack and T-Track where there's a single track main using the Unitrack for the edge connections. Does anyone know of such a standard?
Sure I could just modify T-Trak since it's my module and do what I want and just pick one of the two lines that are standard, but I'm curious if someone is already doing such a thing and I don't need to reinvent the wheel.
Any thoughts?
Kris
Kris,
I was an avid Ntrakker for many years, but always fudged the standards to meet my own desires. The club I was in finally voted to ditch Ntrak standards and settle on our own, and then after a decade or so , decided to disband due to personality problems among the ranks.
I decided to establish my own standards for a portable, sectional layout that I could easily disassemble and move if my residence changed or I decided to go to shows. Since the layout was to be set up in my layout room the vast majority of time, I decided to make my standards "fine" enough to satisfy myself and other experienced model railroaders who would be operating on it rather than build it with specifications that made it easy for short people (children) to see.
Another model railroader whose main focus was Nn3, but who wanted to run his standard gauge roster decided to build a 30' section that would buckle up to mine, so we put our heads together and came up with some "standards" that after building the modules and displaying our setup at shows, has led us to believe we made the correct choices.
Here are some of the more general spec's for our portable layout in no particular order of importance:
(1) The layout is to be "sectional" with each section's dimensions generally being 6' long.
(2) "Modular" ends will be 3' deep, but fascias will be free-form and "flowing" in some places being narrower or wider than 3' depending on aesthetics, scenery depth, and track plan.
(3) Distance from railhead to floor will be 52" (which was determined by raising and lowering a finished section to see what we, and a number of operators liked the best. 52" height was the 100% preference).
(4) A removable skyboard 18" high is mandatory (with a few exceptions) and the rear of all skyboards shall be painted the same color as the layout fascia.
(5) Micro Engineering Code 55 flex and/or hand-laid PCB Code 40 trackage for standard gauge mainlines, sidings, spurs, and branchlines.
(6) Micro Engineering Code 55 #6 DCC-friendly turnouts and DCC-friendly hand-laid turnouts where appropriate.
(7) All turnouts shall be actuated by Circuitron Tortoise switch motors.
( 8 ) All turnout frogs shall be live.
(9) Track ends shall be even with section ends and module ends, with no connecting tracks.
(10) Benchwork shall be twin L-girder wood trusses with 3/4" plywood ends, folding legs w/height adjustable coasters, splined Masonite subroadbed supported by risers with common hardware on ALL modules/sections and only NEW lumber to be used. Yards & large industrial area subroadbed will be 1/2" plywood.
(11) Each 6' section/module shall have a minimum of 2 swing-arm lamps with 100W incandescent equivalent 6500K LED bulbs.
(12) DCC wireless operation using Digitrax
(13) Main power buses will be 12ga premium copper/lo-ox/fine strand red/black zip, with color coded Anderson Power Poles between sections/modules.
(14) Secondary power buses will be 14ga premium copper/lo-ox/fine strand red and black wire.
(15) Feeders will be a maximum of 6" long, 22ga solid core red or black wire.
(16) Feeders will be soldered to each and every piece of rail near its center.
(17) 3M IDC (suitcase connectors) will be used for track power wire connections except between feeders and track which will be soldered.
(18) DC wiring will be provided on an individual module/section basis for accessories and switch motor power.
(19) All toggle switches for throwing turnouts shall be center-off.
(20) Mainline track centerline radius will be 24" minimum.
(21) Branchline track centerline radius will be 18" minimum.
(22) Industrial track centerline radius will be 16" minimum.
(23) All mainline curves will be appropriately superelevated.
We also settled on a common sky color and a common fascia color as well as a common attachment method and color for the layout's cloth skirt.
We also settled on several aspects of the portable layout that we were interested in:
(1) Operation will be from the front of the layout.
(2) An exclusion zone provided by a brightly colored rope supported by steel stanchions will be present at every public setup.
(3) The layout will consists of Layout Design Elements (LDE's) of at least 12' derived from prototype scenes from several western railroads which interchanged in Ogden and/or Salt Lake City Utah in the 1950's era.
(4) Maximum train length will be 9'7" (A Big Boy, 30 to 35 cars and a caboose)
(5) Passing Sidings will be at least 10' long between clearance locations.
(6) Scenes will blend into each other from a scenic standpoint with no scenic dividers.
(7) All track will be painted, ballasted realistically and weathered appropriately.
( 8 ) Low-profile flanges will be standard on all rolling stock, and on all motive power if possible.
(9) All motive power wheelsets will be as exactly gauged to NMRA specs as possible before being allowed to run on the layout.
We decided on double-track operation, with prototype specific passing sidings (i.e. Union Pacific's characteristic center sidings) with track centers at modular interfaces being 1.5", which is the scale distance between U.P.'s double tracked mainline in Weber and Echo Canyons between Wahsatch and Ogden. Minimum track center distance at other positions not at the modular interface is 1".
Photo (1) - Non-standard (odd-sized) corner adapter section showing basic benchwork, fascia, skyboard and well-braced folding legs:One of the really nice things about having 6' or shorter sections/modules is when you need to work underneath them, you can disconnect them from the rest of the layout and position them on a table for easy and comfortable access to whatever part of them you need to work on. The following photo illustrates that fact as well as showing the DCC wiring.
Photo (2) - Echo Yard section with folding legs removed when I was converting it to my DCC wiring standards...clamped to a 6' folding-leg table for easy access:Because there are no connecting tracks, the modular/section interfaces are much less obvious. However, to prevent damage to the tracks when transporting, end-protectors made from various lengths of pine 1X4's need to be screwed to the module/section ends when they are not clamped up to one another. I mark the screw holes and number each end-protector so they are easy to put back on at shows or when breaking down to transport to shows.
Also, each lattice leg brace has the identical distance between mounting holes so they are all interchangeable. Although ugly, I've found that yardsticks available at The Home Depot are much cheaper than lattice material and are of equal quality. Since the layout, when set up has a cloth skirt, the yardstick markings and "The Home Depot" lettering won't be seen.
Photo (3) - Layout set up at the Evanston Roundhouse Festival a couple of years ago showing my Echo/Park City Yard and Echo Canyon LDE with my son Benjamin chatting with an interested onlooker:Photo (4) - Another view of our portable layout showing my friend Gregg Cudworth's D&RGW LDE:At this time, when we are set up at shows, the layout is a display layout. As it grows, we intend to have operating sessions at shows when other modelers who may decide to adopt our standards for allowing building a decent at-home layout that is portable and portions of which can be taken to shows.
I just completed a move to a new home, and moving my layout was a breeze with the assistance of my son Benjamin. We broke it down and moved it 17 miles in less than half a day. However, it is not yet set up in its new home, but when I unpack all the boxes occupying the train room at this moment, setting it up will only take about three hours for both of us.
Photo (5) - Echo Engine Refueling Facility and Park City Yard...an 18' LDE:Photo (6) - Echo West End photo illustrating what the 3' layout depth achieves as to scenery-to-track ratio in N-scale:Photo (7) - Echo Curve photo illustrating what a little superelevation and broad curves on mainline trackage will do for a more realistic appearance of your model trains:Although this is a simplified overview of MY modular/sectional standards, it illustrates the possible complexity of attempting to establish new standards. There are simply a LOT of things to think about. However, you can pick and choose between what you like and what you don't like among the modular standards already established which can greatly cut down on the time involved if you were to develop your own. I did this with most of my DCC wiring standards, using Ntrak show experience and their DCC standards as a good starting point for my own. I also liked their 24" minimum mainline radius as well as the fortuitously correct for me mainline center to center track spacing.
Since the purpose of my own modular/sectional standards was not to make it easy for someone to build modules to my standards, but to allow standardization and a quality foundation for creating a more realistic "home-style" portable layout, I only chose from existing modular standards those which I had experience with and liked or had experimented with. For instance, I don't like not having a skyboard as is FreeMo's modular standard, so I made a nice, tall one mandatory for me. I also HATED Ntrak's (or anybody else's) joiner tracks protocol, which creates a really ugly, problem causing solution to poor workmanship...so, I eliminated them, and haven't had any problems whatsoever doing so.
Hopefully, this long post will assist you in determining more precisely what you may want to do and achieve when adopting your own modular/sectional standards.
Cheerio!
Bob Gilmore