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Over this weekend and yesterday afternoon, I worked just about full time to replace these eight shelves  . . . 

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. . . with the eight shelves shown in the photo below, which are located in the same place.  I did this because . . . 

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The old shelves were 25 3/4 inch long.  The new shelves are 29 1/2 inch long, or just 3 3/4 inch longer: that 3 3/4 inch is every last mm that I could squeeze out of that wall: I am using the studs in the wall as the sides of this shelf assembly now.

 

Three and three-quarters inch might not seem like much - in total I added only two and a half feet of shelf space (three and three quarters inch times eight shelves).  But a shelf that is too short might as well not exist.  And while I had a total of one hundred and twelve feet of shelves reserved for display of scale steamers, I had five steamers - very handsome steamers I might add - that I could not fit on my display shelves, but had to store under the layout, out of sight.  I had too many short shelves. 

 

This problem came to a head when I got the new MTH Premier Union Pacific FEF-3 last week.  It is a stunningly beautiful loco that I want on display when not running it, but I realized it was going to be the sixth loco going down under the layout when not running - or something else, like a Mallet, or Legacy NYC Mohawk, or a Premier NYC Niagara, would have to go instead.  I could not let that happen!

 

Before jumping in, I studied whether the additional three plus inches I could get with all this work would really help.  I was shocked at the result. The histogram below shows the shelf needs (length plus half an inch or so) of my forty-eight scale steam locomotives.  Fully forty percent fall into a length category where they fit on the new shelves but not the old.  There are just a lot of O-gauge steam locos - at least those I buy - that fall into this range of length.  I went from not being able to fit all of them on 112 feet of shelves to having lots of flexibility about where I place them, and room for a few more big steamers, on 115 feet of shelves.  

 

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So while it was a lot of work, it was well worth the effort. 

 

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Last edited by Lee Willis
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Lee and I have the same problem - way too many locomotives and not enough shelf space.   I am doing an addition to one of the hangars, and moving shelves to the airport.

 

I have three problems: dust, vibration, and the occasional earthquake.  My shelves are roughly 1 1/2" thick, with a shallow slot on the top front and a very deep slot on the front underside (I also slot the shelf so I do not have to buy more track - the flanges drop into the slots).

 

Then I saw long strips of extruded acrylic, slip them up into the deep slot, and let them drop into the shallow one.  Presto-earthquake protection.

"I'm still trying to figure out how Lee gets 32 hours in a day while the rest of us only have 24.  Where do you find the time?"

 

Has anyone actually seenLee Willis?

 

I have long suspected that "Lee Willis" is actually a group of skilled craftsmen, engineers, and writers working to produce all the stuff we see. Wouldn't be surprised to find a television project behind this somewhere.  

Originally Posted by Gilly@N&W:
Originally Posted by Forrest Jerome:

"At least I know better than to bring any more Glenn Snyder shelves home"

 why?

My wife took one look at them and went postal. They ended up in the landfill....

Was this simply because they were to have trains on them, or does she just find extruded aluminum shelving aesthetically offensive?

Originally Posted by Hudson J1e:

Awesome job Lee. I love your train room. Where did you find a white fire extinguisher? Assuming that's what it is.

I bought it at Lowes.  It was white when I got it.  Not sure if the color means anything but the other two are bigger, and red.  I have three fire extinguishers in my trainroom - just in case.

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OGR Publishing, Inc., 1310 Eastside Centre Ct, Suite 6, Mountain Home, AR 72653
800-980-OGRR (6477)
www.ogaugerr.com

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