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Moments ago I just finished the third building in this mining ghost town.   This one is

in better shape, having recently seen duty as U.S. Forest Ranger Station, after its

life as a land office and assay office.  However that sign as all the others are stacked

against the building and the shingles are stripping, windows broken, and deteriation

has begun.  Next and probably last will be the saloon, although the station's flag stop

post needs to be done.

Started to install a new control system for the switch yard. There are 14 tracks with two rotary dials controlling tracks 1-7 & 8-14. By using this system, I am not putting power out to the sidings when the trains are in storage. I can activate just the track where I want to move a train. Considering they all will hold a passenger train, think about the power draw if the sidings were not controlled by a system similar to what I am using.

I roughed in a foam incline to reach the bridge abutment of my swing bridge. This was an afterthought. I hadn't planned on using the bridge. One day I thought why not? It set me back a few weeks but I'm moving forward again. I completed the additional wiring for the bridge, the bridge approach, and two additional passenger yards that I added. They weren't on the plan either. There is a switch half way up the incline so that had to be addressed as well. I laid some track over the loose foam and just had to run an engine up to check it out. This also accomplised checking the bridge overhead clearence. This same engine, the Williams EF-4 doesn't make the Lionel 213 but does fine on this K-Line swing bridge. Where is Maury when you need him?

 

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Today I completed the last two buildings in my ghost town, well, one is a cellar hole

with a chimney sticking out of it, and a rusty stove and other junk in it...the "Sluicebox Saloon", with its collapsed facade and sunken roof is done except for selecting rusty signs for the sides of the building.  Will have to search and print some Coors signs.

Added a rusty REA sign to the station ruins, and leaned a U.S. Forest Service sign

beside the now closed assay office/former Forest Ranger office.  May add a Conoco

sign to that to pile to give the building yet another, intermediary,  prior life as a gas station.

Next to assemble it in a temporary "town" shape and shoot some pictures of it.

I finished the wiring and testing of the new rotary switch control system for my switch yard, all 14 tracks work wonderfully. Big job out of the way. I can now see the finish line for my two month renovation project. Also started putting train sets back on the layout.

 

I have to put ballast and grass material down for the siding yard and then it is on to the large new train station complex.

Installed Lionel flagpole and MTH signal dispatch board.  Also started repairing an old Lionel Alco where the plastic shell cracked near the rear frame mounting screw.  Serviced it and applied a layer of fiberglass sheeting / epoxy to the area.  Serviced the loco and will likely install a tru-blast horn while it's open.

Just now I set the tree stumps around the cellar hole of the ghost town, and put the mail

box out in front...may add a  1920's Berkshire Valley gas pump if I have one(found a

later version, but this scene demands the glass top type), and a gas price sign...and cleared a table so I can set up the light box for pictures.  Just needs some operating

ghosts to float through...

Well today I got the table up and put another piece of plywood on top. I also got it bolted to the other 2 tables that I built. I still have some building to do  so I guess I'll have it done soon as I have enough cash on hand. This month is tough $$$ wise. So now I guess I'll I can lay some more track.

I finished the work in the central portion of my renovation project. There was a good deal of work on my hands and knees for hours on end. Thankfully, this portion of the renovation project is done.

 

Now I can load all of the trains back on the layout and then start work on the new train station complex that is easy to reach. The end of this project is now in sight.

Patrick was over yesterday, and we got about 3/4 of the way around the north section of the train room with the L for the suspended ceiling. We probably would have gotten it all done except for the fact that there was a section in one corner where the duct work hadn't been boxed in yet.

 

That was when disaster struck. We were fixing a spot that I had framed years ago, but wasn't quite straight. As he was trimming a 2x2 that was above his head, the saber saw slipped and bit the back of his hand. A few paper towels, a wrap of duct tape, and a couple of aspirin later, he was back to work. Patrick is one tough cookie.

 

Today, I picked up where we left off, and added another chunk to the soffit. There's still a section left to build, then it needs to be sheetrocked. I'm happy to save that for Patrick. Then I sanded some of the putty that Patrick had applied to the backdrop, and painted the section above Dayton's bluff. Finally, I did some vacuuming in preparation for $oo Line's visit Monday. There's a little more to do, but it'll have to wait til Sunday night when I get back from chasing 261.

 

Very little.....inspected a kit of a mining town store, and decided to kitbash it and add

it to my "completed" ghost town, so oversprayed the hydrocal brick and stone castings with a base color prior to  painting individual stones with acrylics.  I did put a "ghost", a shadowy white figure in the town's collapsing saloon where it can be seen back in the building through the vacant, glassless window.

Originally Posted by coloradohirailer:

Very little.....inspected a kit of a mining town store,......ghost town,.......  I did put a "ghost", a shadowy white figure in the town's collapsing saloon where it can be seen back in the building through the vacant, glassless window.

A little glow in the dark paint here and there could make some ghosts "disappear" till dark when they would glow for a while.

Started tearing out the 7 Gargraves switches in the freight yard and replacing them with the new Ross standard gauge switches.  The Ross operate on DC and the rest of the layout is powered by z4000 AC transformers, so this will also involve putting in a DC power supply and new wiring.   

 

The Ross toggle switches take up a lot more space than the toggles I was using, so I am also having to rebuild the control panel for the yard.  One thing leads to another.

 

im sorry to say that I took my layout down.  boy it took only 2 days to do it.  amazing the time spent to build it.  looking forward to design of the new one for winter this year.  Ill be weathering my buildings over the summer.  adding details inside of them.  good luck to all your continuing efforts guys!

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