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2b) Do I just go to the yard and find available cars to put the waybills into? 2c) Do I then hand them to the yardmaster and tell him to find the specified cars and make up a train? 2d) What do folks put the car cards into that comprises the train?
How many cycles do you have your waybills setup for? You don't always have to run four cycles for each car. Some cars can run with only two cycles. Also do you have your cars setup to return someplace when they are empty? On the railroad that I operate, when a car reaches it's final destination, the way bill is removed and sent back to the yard master at the main yard. At the next operating session, that empty car is picked up by the train that is scheduled to work that industry and returned empty to the yard marked on the car card. By doing it this way, you don't always have the same cars going to the same industry, it mixes things up. Hope this helps and remember have fun at the operating session. Expect problems at your first operating session and get feed back from your operators. You may have to rework schedules, train routines, etc. several times before the railroad becomes fluid. But don't worry, it's all part of the process and part of the fun. Your layout looks like it will be fun to operate on. Are you using Time Tables and Train Orders?
2c) - Unequivocally, no. Your yardmaster will not have enough time to do that in an operating session. All cars in the yard should have appropriate waybills for that sessions activities and if there isn't a waybill for a card of that session, the car probably doesn't need to be on the layout. The PRSL in particular was about receive, send to customer, pick-up from customer, and ship-out, especially since they had little to no "home" cars.Phil
Phil, I have to disagree. Every car on the railroad should have a car card, empties should not have a way bill.
The railroad has continuous staging, meaning the owner of the layout never has to restage the layout and the staging tracks are loops not stub ended. Part of the responsibility of the Greenwood (Connellsville) yard master is to place way bills into the empty car, car cards headed for staging. Then when the car reappears it is loaded for a destination on the layout. The opposite is true for loads headed for staging, their waybills are rotated or removed depending on the cycle. The same takes place in Durbin for cars headed to staging. If you always keep the same waybills with the same car cards, regular operators will begin ignoring the waybills because they already know where the car is going to be spotted. Also of note, because of continues staging the next operating session just picks up where the last one left off. There are 30 trains that can be operated on the railroad, but generally not all 30 are run during one operating session.
Placing waybills in or removing waybills from a car should never, ever, be done during an operating session. What you are describing, quite frankly, is the actions of a lazy owner. Phil
Are there more photos of the layout somewhere? I like the trackplan, but I don't think I've seen it before
Southern NJ is pretty devoid of N scalers.