It occurred to me that a blog about a model
railroad would seem odd if there were no photos of said model railroad. So here
are a couple photos of the progress that the track gang has made over the last
few months. A six-track yard (plus passing track) was installed using Shinohara
and Atlas switches and Peco track. The yard is code 70, with the passing track
and main line code 83. The layout is oriented with the aisle running
north-south, so it is divided into the ‘east half’ and ‘west half’ for the time
being; someday we’ll get around to assigning proper names to the various tracks
and locations. The yard is on the west half with curved north and south yard
leads to maximize the track lengths. A spur will be run to the east side to
serve about 3-4 industries.
The north lead of the yard after correcting the finicky trackwork. |
View of the yard looking north from the south end during construction. |
See: most of the mess was cleaned up! Here I'm mocking up the east industrial spur. The rolling mill will go approximately where the blue box of switches is located in the photo. |
So far we have been successful in running trains on
DCC on the layout with few derailments. Most have been attributed to cars with
narrow wheelset gauge, or tight trucks leading to rail-climb derailments. The
north yard ladder was found to have a couple trouble spots so a # 4 turnout
from the passing track to the ladder was replaced with a longer-radius curved
turnout. This helped smooth operations by eliminating the derailments caused by
the sharp curve and the short transition from the level of the passing track to
the yard. Next step will be to add some form of turnout control to the north end since it is not accessible for switching operations (unless access hatch is removed). At this point, both electrical and mechanical turnout controls are being studied but no decision has been made yet as to how we'll proceed. The south end of the yard has been outfitted with Caboose Industries ground throws since it is within reach and this is likely where the majority of the switching will take place.
Thanks for stopping by,
Cheers,
Peter.
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