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Doing whatever you can to keep the yards flowing evenly (without the bottlenecks) will go a long way to making the thing seem more prototypical. Reduce trains or shift them on the schedule to reduce those bottlenecks.
I am trying to copy a prototype schedule so it is a balancing act between following the real schedule and making changes to actually make it (semi-smoothly) work. (For example putting a dedicated switcher in the south Woodbury mini-yard (that the prototype did not have)).
Rick,Thanks again for a great experience. The tour of Westville/Woodbury really brought your layout to life. Can't wait for round II!!!!!!Bob.
...One thing I've seen on the layouts I've operated on is the yardmasters will leave the yards pretty much ready to go for the next session. Depending on the person running it, this could mean everything is assigned to the right track for the next sessions work or even completely blocked. I know we always attempt to block everything by town and even industry order when possible, but sometimes there isn't enough time and that's okay too,Phil
Planting some grass soon?
...Couple of suggestions I might make, especially if your yard is the log jam is to:(1) Give the YM some specific instructions - a train line up sheet - that spells out his work for the day in chronological order. For example, is he knows there's two southbound trains coming to the yard before the first northbound train, he can focus on getting the southbound cars ready and ignore the northbound class tracks - for now. (2) The YM's biggest challenge is keeping the yard "fluid" - which in my experience means about half empty. Consider helping him with this and have a couple of tracks preblocked before the session starts so the YM has a chance to get ahead of things. (3) One of the best things I did was have the YM "report to work" before the rest of the crew starts running. I let the YM get started the minute he gets to the layout for the op session, only stopping for the actual "pre brief." It seems to help get things moving smoother. Hope this helps, Marty