Derailments

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Derailments - Model trains - MRH feature July 2017

 

 

 

 

 

 

Read this issue!

 

 

 

 

 

Please post any comments or questions you have here.

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p51's picture

Notes on some of the 'rules'...

  • Rule 3. I can't count the number of people who've sneered when I tell them I model in On30. That is, until they saw photos. Then, I couldn't count the same people who then said, "Oh, you're not running with shorty cars and 10" curves. I like it!" Even still, some of the same people have asked me why I didn't go with HOn3 as there were ET&WNC locomotives in that scale. I always then asked if they knew how well those things ran (they run terribly, a lot like early brass imports). But once people see my layout, I do get a lot of, "That's not at all what I envisioned when you said On30," but in a good way.
  • Rule 4. I spent over a year planning my layout, but at the same time I was buying/modifying/painted/decalling/weathering rolling stock and structures. When the layout bench work was done, I had a great deal of stuff already completed.
  • Rule 8. I've been saying this for a while now. Long before I even started planning on building my layout, I wanted to model a specific place in a very specific time. it's a narrow-gauge RR, so there's no interchange. I bought very little stuff I couldn't use once the layout was looking like I wanted it.
  • Rule 10. True, because they'll often make up stuff. I knew a SP "expert" whom to this day I suspect never picked up a book on the railroad. Most of the stuff he 'knew' was utter BS.
Lee

My Flickr website with layout photos

You can never have too much detail or too many trees on a layout.
UPWilly's picture

I liked it so much ...

... when this was first posted on this forum, I created a tabloid size (11" x 17") poster and have it prominently posted near my layout. For those that would like it, here I post it in a size that would fit herein.

Thank you, Laurell (JRG1951)

 

Bill D.

N Scale (1:160), not N Gauge. DC (analog), Stapleton PWM Throttle.

Proto-freelance Southwest U.S. 2nd half 20th Century.

Keep on trackin'


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