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Mark Dance-your trestle is exactly what I need for the Kingman Canyon layout...did you scratch it?...would love some more info on this; need to build a few like this, only with ballasted deck.Bruce
Mark - really like the pulp mill scene. The thing that most strikes me (other than the structures, lighting, backdrop, etc) is that you allocated enough room for an industry that large so that it doesn't look like it's been squeezed into a way too small space. The huge paved area, inclusion of parking lots, and adequate space for trucks to turn around is not something you often see from our HO brothers!
Have a great weekend.md
Mark, I have enjoyed watching your layout progress for quite some time now, thanks for sharing and keep it up...However, I feel I have to play devils advocate for a minute.....In the above pic, all I see is yellow tags!!!!....I am sorta bewildered that someone would spend so much time, building a believable layout, weathering etc, and then put those tags everywhere, and on the cars too!!...Surely there is another way(operating system) that would not include tags on everything!!?......This is one of the nicest layouts I've seen in N scale, but those tags ruin the scene every time for me....Of course, it's your layout and your opinion is the one that matters, but I couldn't hold it in anymore!....Hopefully I can encourage you to get those things off this otherwise AMAZING layout!
Where'd you get these bolt plates?
thx for the feedback...and I appreciate your compliments as to its appearance but what is most important to me is that the layout try to be *amazing* to operate. Normally for "glamour shots" like magazine publications I take the tags off however I have an ops session coming up next week and the layout needs staging. I am primarily interested in operations not modelling and the layout has thus been built primarily for operations and secondarily for appearance. To this end I will air on the side of what makes it easier and satisfying to operate rather than what makes the layout look more "realistic". The primary customers I would like to please are the crew.I have studied car forwarding systems extensively and compared many approaches under the specific circumstances of the C&W (many many similar cars (60% are CPR box car red 40' XMs) , non unique car numbering, 5:1 fast clock, tracks on 13' centers and deep scenes). My estimates - verified by N scalers who use other systems on their layouts like Al Frasch and Scott Sabo - is that car cards, switch lists and other systems that require cars to be uniquely identified and referenced to off-layout paperwork might well add as much as 20% to the overhead of operating the C&W. I define overhead as time spent by operators dealing with the car forwarding system and thus delaying the movement of cars during a session. This OH is worse for yard operations and less or zero for through freights, but we don't have many throughs and those we do have don't get tagged. For a switching job like the Kraft switcher which serves the Celgar plant I think 20% would be a fair estimate of the overhead which tags eliminates.I also recognize that in photos tags can cause a negative reaction. I tend to look through the tags now and actually think it is more accurate to portray the layout as an operator would see it in a session. This may well be the same reason I don't like the "deception" of photo shopped model photos. The occasional negative reaction caused me to seek data so, 18 months ago, I surveyed *all* of the operators who have ever operated on the layout and got back about 60 replies. About 60% of the replies were from HO modelers and 40% from N scale modelers. I think I published the results on Railwire at that time but to recap: 92% of respondents felt the tag system is easier to use than other Car Forwarding systems would be in [the C&W’s] environment and 81% felt the appearance of the tags on the cars did not detract from their operating experience. I think when you operate most people are pretty much impervious to what is happening away from their immediate tasks and therefore not struggling with a car forwarding system makes the session easier, less stressful and in the end more fun for them.So thank you again for the comment. It is something I struggled with previously but I won't sacrifice my primary objective in the hobby and the survey results indicate to me that until something better (easier *and* less noticeable) comes along we are on the right track.md
When I operate on layouts using car-card systems, the ops crews often props the car-cards against each corresponding car while blocking or switching cars. You think that tags are bad? You should see how a layout looks like with relatively giant car-cards are standing up on the layout, hiding the cars behind them!