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Here is my original layout I started back in 2006.  It was built with the intention of being semi-portable and able to fit into a 10'x12' room.  This layout had been assembled and disassembled through two different work relocation's. 

Initial Construction

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1st Relocation
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2nd relocation

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With the 2nd relocation gave me a basement, so I tore it down and started over with a couple of new design goals in mind

-Two main loops with o-72 radius as the minimum except for passing sidings
-Longer Trains
-No more drop in bridges to get access to the layout
-One loop with a grade and the other designed with out one for older LTI trains
-Storage of multiple trains for staging, but not hidden under the layout, but rather on shelves
-Trestle and water
-Mountain with hidden siding in mountain to hide train
-Some sort of icing facility
-All areas of layout with in a 3' reach to make scenery easier

Not much progress on the layout since last winter (summer came). Just completed most of my trestle, will not installed the X-braces until the scenery is complete.

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Last edited by Hump Yard Mike
Original Post

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At top of the text box when you're posting a message is a row of icons. The 3rd one from the right is the photo linking icon. Click on it, then paste the link (using the "control v" key combination) where it says "Image URL." Then click OK. The image will appear like below. I pasted your last two links into two separate "Image URL" lines (clicked on the image icon once for each image).



Mike...the layout looks great!!! I really like your track plan and the trestle is very nice. Since you are in the general area of our group, the Mid-America 3-Railers, I would like to see you join us! No dues so it won't cost a thing! Dennis Brennan lives not far from you and he just became a member. Please let me know if you are interested...e-mail me via my profile.

Thanks,
Alan

I have not put any pictures up recently.  The layout is starting to look pretty respectable.  

 

I started with the RR track plan below (24' x 15') back in Dec '10 and completed most of the bench work with tracks and switches wired (DCS and TMCC) by the end of Feb '11 ( also completed most of the scenery on the mountain).

 

The summer of '11 came with nothing else started until Dec'11, when I installed my trestle.  Since then, I have put the remainder of my river in, created more pink snow around the entire house (from pink foam shaping), put down most of the ballast with a dirty wash, along with a skirt attached.

 

I think I have a little over 80% of my scenery roughed.  

 

I used Patrick H's method of carving the foam and Dennis B. fake water approach (painted shower door glass) on the large part of the river.

 

Shown below are many of the various stages in the layouts construction to present day.

 

Mike

MikeLeeLyout

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All

 

Thank for nice comments!  I am a slow worker and wish I had more progress.  I am very jealous at what others have completed on this forum in short order on several of the larger layouts.   

 

David,

 

Regarding the wall, I cut the wood with a friends table saw to create the protruding edge of the wall and then glued them to masonite for the back edge.  It looks convincing from the front, but added the top cap to conceal the top edge.   When painted with several coats of spray gap filler, the vertical seam in the piling was created by scrolling an edge in to the filler.  

 

 

Allan,

 

Not sure how much of the layout needs to be finished for an article (is it ever finished?), but would love to  participate.  I have a ton of images showing from the start to present day for my layout.  Let me know.

 

Mike

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Last edited by Hump Yard Mike
Mike, you are doing a fantastic job, and I think at a good clip, you don't want to get burned out!
 
Originally Posted by Hump Yard Mike:

All

 

Thank for nice comments!  I am a slow worker and wish I had more progress.  I am very jealous at what others have completed on this forum in short order on several of the larger layouts   

 

Peter,

 

Regarding the wall I cut wood with a friends table saw, glued them to masonite.   When painted with several coats of spray gap filler, scrolled the vertical seam in the piling.  

 

 

Allan,

 

Not sure how much of the layout needs to be finished for an article (is it ever finished?), but would love to  participate.  I have a ton of images showing from the start to present day for my layout.  Let me know.

 

Mike

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Awesome vision and execution.  That is inspirational.  My favorite is the water.  The ripples and the color are perfect.  How did you do that, if I may ask?  Then the trestle bridge.  Your plan rocks too, with the seperate yard outside the main layout.  I love it!  I thank you for sharing your talent.  Again, it is inspiring.  Have fun, work at your own pace.  I have built enough to know that everything takes time, especially when you expect the caliber of work you are after.  Enjoy

Originally Posted by Hump Yard Mike:

Allan,

 

Not sure how much of the layout needs to be finished for an article (is it ever finished?), but would love to  participate.  I have a ton of images showing from the start to present day for my layout.  Let me know.

 

Mike

Mike:

 

It certainly does not need to be completed (no layout is truly complete anyhow).  Just needs to have enough done to provide images so about 15 or so can be used in the magazine.

 

And in the process of building your layout, you may employ some how-to techniques that might make for good articles over and above a layout feature (a step-by-step covering how to build a retaining wall, for example).  We can always use more nicely illustrated how-tos features.

 

When you're ready, just contact me by phone or e-mail and I'll give you all the assistance I can.

Yup I used Ross turn outs .  I should have learned my lesson on my first layout in struggles of certain engines having electrical problems over curved turn outs.   I learned the hard way that two of my articulated engines (lionel alleghaney and mth cab forward ) cannot make it physically through the o72/o96 turn out (the o72 route, it seems just add tadd too tight, I am not sure if it is what lionel would call o72).  Not enough room on the layout to correct with a different switch.  Try to avoid curved turn outs.

Last edited by Hump Yard Mike

With the curved turnouts (we have a #8 curved on our layout) you have to wire in the closure rails (rails between the points and the frog) as alternate hot rails using a set of SPDT contacts on a tortoise switch motor. This will prevent stalling by locomotives with incompatible pickup roller spacing. If you're using Z-stuff switch motors, add the Z-stuff SPDT relay to the control. Also, make sure that both sets of stock rails are properly tied to common. This approach is also advisable on longer straight turnouts (#6, #8, #10) as well.

 

BTW, Mike, love the work on the layout. Looks great. Also like the sea wall construction technique -- first rate.

I finally have an update to post on my layout.  I completed my dam for my river.   When I was designing it, I was not thinking about how much water it would control but more of the general look.  After looking at tons of pictures to model it after, I gave up and sketched my own design to build off of.  I was excited to get started, only after it was built, did I realize that it can only regulate a bit more than a foot of water.  The time a little project like this seems to take always seems more than it should.

 

The weathering leaves something to be desired, I tried dry brushing it.  While it looks better than no weathering, I could be so much better.  If any one had any recommendations for books on air brushing, I would like to read them.

 

Just now drawing my own plans for my icing station that will service 6 cars from between two tracks.  I have been struggling on finding pictures to help me with this also.  I would love to see any ones pictures to get some other ideas.    

 

Mike

 

 

 

 

 

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Last edited by Hump Yard Mike

I just want to add to the compliments you have received about your layout Mike. There is a lot of thought, creativity and attention to detail that went into this layout. The dam is an example of this.

 

Seeing the early photos of your benchwork and following the progress through your updates makes me appreciate all the work that has gone into this layout. Thanks for sharing.

 

Steve Tapper  

I love the guy in the inner tube below the bridge.  the dam came out great.  first I have seen anybody do that. a great idea.  The design is great for the room.  you can see all the angles and easy to access parts.  it makes me think on how to design my 2 car garage layout because I have the center post.  Super detail!  thanks for sharing

Chris

 

 

I am sure this old hat for many of you, but I was pretty excited on an area my wife and I completed over the last couple of weekends (been a while since any progress on layout).  We picked up one of the tippi foam cutters to build walls with a brick pattern 24' long (3, 8' long sections ) for the back of layout.  I think they came out really nice.

 

Staring with the pink foam Pattern

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Giving them a texture with round handle dents and melting off the shark edges of bricks

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Painting them dark grey and then working in rubbed light grey in certain areas for a more weathered look along with some green scenery grass

 

 

 

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Area before the walls were placed

 

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After installation

 

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Originally Posted by Chris D:

I watched the tippi video also.  wow easy to do with the right tool.  I bought a foam factory straight bar one.  but im getting that rounded one for doing this.!  nice!  spend 10cents rather than a fortune for these premade ones!  and you take the round part and cut in different directions to get cut block or use a stiff metal handle spike brush to make cinder blocks !  wow.  that easy.  that video is great!  watch

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aP3OGGmP1HE

 

 

Chris

 

Originally Posted by Hump Yard Mike:

 

 

I am sure this old hat for many of you, but I was pretty excited on an area my wife and I completed over the last couple of weekends (been a while since any progress on layout).  We picked up one of the tippi foam cutters to build walls with a brick pattern 24' long (3, 8' long sections ) for the back of layout.  I think they came out really nice.

 

Staring with the pink foam Pattern

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Giving them a texture with round handle dents and melting off the shark edges of bricks. Painting them dark grey and then working in rubbed light grey in certain areas for a more weathered look along with some green scenery grass

 

 

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Killer work all over!!

Last edited by Lima

Thanks for nice comments all.

 

J Daddy

 

Here is an example before the sharp edges are taken off of the pattern (I just roughed in the pattern for a test piece

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With tool there are many tips, I use the bigger loop shown below

 

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I drag the loop centered in the mortar edge shown below.

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My first pass shown above, is  a little sloppy.  Once you start doing it, you get feel for how fast to draq the tool across, not long enough, not enough gone, too slow, and you end you end up melting huge holes.  I did a few more passes shown below.  I think the key to this is that there is none of the original plane left of the foam, just texture.

 

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Then I randomly hit the surface with round edge, I used my dry wall saw handle for this.

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ONce  a few random dents are placed, the results are shown below

 

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Mike..
 
I am new to model R.R. and just came across your post.  If you dont mind me asking, what type of track and switches did you use?
 
Originally Posted by Hump Yard Mike:

Not much progress on the layout since last winter (summer came). Just completed most of my trestle, will not installed the X-braces until the scenery is complete.

Layout Overview

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Old layout with Trestle not cut out

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Installing Bents

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Installing Track

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Fun Picks after being complete

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Wow, am I glad I came to this sub-forum, today, for the first time! This whole thread is a gift of information, and the layout is spectacular ! You have created a very happy place which appears exactly suited to your smile. So, I am very happy for your success, Hump Yard Mike. Thanks for sharing the whole experience with us here. It is especially inspiring to see the obviously measured care and careful planning you exercised throughout.

FrankM.

I too just came across this thread. Mike I want to thank you for sharing the step by step process with both excellent prose and photographs.

 

I have very little experience with detailed scenery and this is exactly what I am looking for to help the STBL (Soon to be layout)

 

Love the detail and as Joe mentioned the railroadiana looks great.

 

all the best,

 

Paul

Just completed my small town on my layout (well almost complete, still missing windows and interior lights).  My layout theme was not really set up to have a down town, so I made it into one of my corners.  Only room for one way streets in this town.  A series of progress shots are shown below.

 

My wife Leah did both of the three story buildings and the red two story in the front row (Ameritown kits).

 

 

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Hope to have the rest of the icing area completed soon.

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Last edited by Hump Yard Mike

Very great work!  I especially like your "water."  My only suggestion, with the greatest respect, remove the pictures off of the walls or much better put up a back-drop so that the visual integrity of your scene is not disrupted by a life-sized painting.

 

I have seen so many amazing layouts with absolutely outstanding scenery that was "tarnished" by objects in the background, i.e., destroying the visual integrity of the scenery.

 

Even a simple back-drop of pale blue if preferable to nothing.

 

REGARDLESS, your work is fantastic!

It would be very difficult to build this in the corner, so I actually built the entire module on my work bench and just placed it into the corner.

 

Regarding the sidewalks and street, I cut the sidewalk out of Masonite and painted them solid white, and then dusted them with brown and then grey paints, so they appear speckled(as described Dennis Brenan's hi rail book).  To finish them up, they were scored to give them sidewalk relief cracks.   These were then glued onto the painted pink foam.

 

The streets are plumbers putty tinted with black to give the light grey color.

 

 

Last edited by Hump Yard Mike

Thanks for the nice comments, it is really fun to look back at the older posts and see where you have come from.

 

For 2 years now I have been threatening to complete my icing facility.  I finally settled on using the Altas O ice house and built my own double track icing platform from scratch (except the Shack).  The reason for the two platforms is that the lower platform is used to unload ice for stocking the ice house and the upper platform would be used to load the cars, who knows if this is how they really did it..  The ice blocks move back and fourth by a motor, check it out on the utube link.  With all of that, I just got it placed and landscaped last weekend.  I am really pleased with how it came out.

 

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The korber switch tower was also recently completed.  My first building kit and first time using the brick motor.  A rough interior was also constructed for it. 

 

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I tied the recently completed corner city scene into the rest of the layout with some additional landscaping and also completed a tunnel cutaway on the other side of the layout.  The MOW crew came by to complete some switch point work and a frog build up repair.

 

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After a 2 year search for the perfect piece of furniture that is short and not too overwhelming to the layout where I can just enjoy the trains, I found it last weekend at a 2nd hand store for next to nothing.

 

 

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If I could figure out an industry scene by the river, I would be set

 

 

 

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Last edited by Hump Yard Mike

The siding I need an industry for is shown below, starting off as 12" wide, widening to 15" and roughly 3' long.  I plan to swap out the hellgate sometime in the future with lift bridges.  Considering using a curved 072/54 switch off of the mainline lead for two stub ended tracks.

 

A river dredge and sand harvesting facility was a thought.  I also have thought about some kind of crane that I might automate (something larger and more customized than the standard magnetic crane from lionel), not sure of the industry.  I had also thought about a Griffin Rail Wheel manufacture, where raw materials could come off of a river barge. 

 

Any ideas here would be appreciated 

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