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In the upcoming December/January issue of OGR, a layout and track plan article on John Allen's famous Gorre & Daphetid layout will appear, revised for O gauge:
JohnAllensGorre&DaphitedRRv1c

G&D_V7b_image

O-Gauge Gorre & Daphetid RR

John Allen’s famous classic benchmark HO RR design has entertained and instructed model RR enthusiasts since it’s 1946 design.  The layout illustration is artfully composed and detailed, in a blue-print style with formal notations and notes for a 3’7” by 6’8” space.  Inspection of John’s plan reveals its basis as an up-and-over twice-around mainline, with a branch-line diverging at the highest point and climbing even further to cross over the mainlines to reach Daphited.   Near the pond, the town of Gorre has a small turntable, a passing track, and one siding.  The minimum curve radius is very tight for HO, at 14”.   As a professional photographer, John’s layout plan emphasizes scenery and viewing angles, but only basic operating possibilities.

THE O-GAUGE GORRE & DAPHETID TRACK PLAN

This O-gauge interpretation of the G&D is just short of double the size of John’s “Half-O” plan, coming-in at 7’6”x12’.  As an O-gauge plan, a number of features have been added or revised from the original HO plan to meet O-gauge enthusiast expectations.  Three new spurs have been added, and an interchange track to a connecting RR and hidden staging tracks, more structures and operating accessories.

Please see the Dec/Jan issue for the full article, track section diagram, and other information!

--Ken Hoganson

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Last edited by Rich Melvin
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Ken, I sure do remember seeing lots of John Allen material in print when I was growing up.  His may be one reason I started out in HO instead of Lionel O gauge.  The book Linn Westcott wrote on John a few years after his passing is one I have read more than once.  Your layout plan certainly does John's original G&D good justice.  I'll be looking forward to reading the article!!

I too have read the Wescott book about the G&D more than once.  A few years ago, I loaned my original one to a guy, and (surprise!!) he never returned it and I have since moved away.  So in September, I bought another copy, used of course, in pretty good shape.

I have incorporated a few of John Allen's ideas in my layout, including the use of mirrors to fool the eye into "seeing" more depth in a scene than is really there.  He was a genius, and really turned the "train set" into the model railroading hobby we have today.     

The Linn Westcott book was first printed in the early '80s.  I had my copy by at least 1984.  It was there where I learned why he picked the name.  I had been reading Model Railroader and Railroad Model Craftsman since about 1968, but I also mispronounced it in my mind until reading an article in Model Railroader a while after John's passing in 1973 .  That is where I learned it was pronounced as Rich mentioned above.

I might add that John Allen was the Frank Ellison of my formative years.

Last edited by Mark Boyce

Can't wait to see this article in OGR! I recall reading about the Gorre & Daphetid in MR when I began with O gauge trains in the 1950s. I used to think it was pronounced "Gorry and Daf-a-tid" (emphasis on first syllable) until seeing it "translated" only a few years ago. This surely brings back memories of my model railroading as a youngster.

MELGAR

Last edited by MELGAR
ChiloquinRuss posted:

I've never outgrown my need for some 'John' in my modeling.  Here's the famous John Allen Timesaver, this time done in 7 1/2 inch gauge outdoors!  Russ

Timesaver

Wow, can you imagine having this in your backyard?! Sitting up there in a bedroom window (the yard tower), contemplating all the moves (popcorn for the family room, flour for the kitchen...) - pretty cool!

John Allen was also my inspiration for pursuing model trains. I grew up in Santa Cruz, CA and was fortunate to visit John Allen's G&D in the early 1970s, shortly before he passed away. I'll always be grateful to my dad, who had little interest in trains, for cold-calling John to see if our family could visit the layout. John invited us over to his home in Monterey; he was a gracious host and spent several hours with us in his amazing basement. Periodic readings of Linn Westcott's book bring me right back to that visit.

Regarding O scale G&D rolling stock, the only one I've seen is a G&D boxcar offered some years ago by Intermountain. Occasionally one shows up on eBay in the $20-$40 range.

TWebSP posted:

J

Regarding O scale G&D rolling stock, the only one I've seen is a G&D boxcar offered some years ago by Intermountain. Occasionally one shows up on eBay in the $20-$40 range.

The Intermountain G&D boxcar kit was part of the NMRA's Historic Heralds (or something similar in name) series, available at the time only to NMRA members.  It was available in N, HO, S, O and G scales.

This is the S scale version, the O scale version was identical:

KGB 100817 019

Rusty

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TWebSP posted:

John Allen was also my inspiration for pursuing model trains. I grew up in Santa Cruz, CA and was fortunate to visit John Allen's G&D in the early 1970s, shortly before he passed away. I'll always be grateful to my dad, who had little interest in trains, for cold-calling John to see if our family could visit the layout. John invited us over to his home in Monterey; he was a gracious host and spent several hours with us in his amazing basement. Periodic readings of Linn Westcott's book bring me right back to that visit.

Regarding O scale G&D rolling stock, the only one I've seen is a G&D boxcar offered some years ago by Intermountain. Occasionally one shows up on eBay in the $20-$40 range.

What a great opportunity!  Your dad really did well calling John Allen to take the family!  Thank you for sharing!

@Rich Melvin posted:

When I first heard of this railroad, back in the 1970s, I could not figure out how to pronounce the name or why John chose this weird name. It was not until many years later that a fellow model railroader clued me in to John's wicked sense of humor.

Who would have thought it was pronounced "Gory and Defeated?" 

And if you take out the "&" between the two letters, it becomes the first two letters of a curse I will not mention due to the family nature of this blog.

Thanks for this - it looks great in O. That trackplan has always been in the back of my head - my abortive foray into N scale featured a 2' x 9' stretched version with no upper terminal. My stack of old magazines has a British article on the G&D from 1968 which, as a kid, had me trying to build an American-style locomotive from card! I also hand-drew a plan for S gauge American Flyer with a reverse loop from the upper terminal back to the main line. I shoud really try it in SCARM to see if it works. 

Last edited by Firewood
@Firewood posted:

Thanks for this - it looks great in O. That trackplan has always been in the back of my head - my abortive foray into N scale featured a 2' x 9' stretched version with no upper terminal. My stack of old magazines has a British article on the G&D from 1968 which, as a kid, had me trying to build an American-style locomotive from card! I also hand-drew a plan for S gauge American Flyer with a reverse loop from the upper terminal back to the main line. I shoud really try it in SCARM to see if it works. 

Interesting idea for an "enhanced' G&D; an elevated reverse loop.  Which then suggests a reverse loop at the lower level, as part of the "twice around up-an-over" main loop.   I might try that. 

Suggestions for a track system?  Maybe Atlas-O.

@Ken-Oscale posted:

Interesting idea for an "enhanced' G&D; an elevated reverse loop.  Which then suggests a reverse loop at the lower level, as part of the "twice around up-an-over" main loop.   I might try that. 

Suggestions for a track system?  Maybe Atlas-O.

So here is a concept to see if the idea will fit.  It will!  Lots more work need to clean-up, fine-tune, and improve.

Enhanced_G&D_V1a

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