Rene Gourley renegourley

This week, the posse consisted of just Jim and myself; Julian being stuck down a hole somewhere, and Andrew being off chasing the ghost of the Northern Pacific. Between this and a previous session with Andrew, we have most of the ties laid. The trick to placing ties quickly and accurately is a tie jig, which my daughter helped me build a couple of months ago. It could hardly be simpler, but it saves a lot of faffing with glue and individual sticks of wood. A couple of construction notes:

  • My jig is about two feet long because that was the length of the plywood scrap I made it from. You could probably handle a three-footer (1 metre), but beyond that the strips of masking tape with ties on them will appear to become self-aware, and try to confound you by getting tangled.
  • The Kappler ties I'm using are at least a decade old, and there is tremendous variation in the width. I understand that you don't see that nowadays. I wish I'd built my jig with a wider tie in mind, as I had to discard quite a few ties that didn't fit in the jig and that upsets the Scottish side of my nature.
  • Andrew reminded me that you don't want the jig too tight as that makes it difficult to get the tie strips out later.

Because some of the ties are a bit tight in the jig, the tie strips don't fall out easily. I wind up prying them up with a ruler so only the ends of the ties are still in the jig. Then the strip comes out without further resistance.

Note that the ties are laid on top of the masking tape, rather than the other way around. I don't know if this is important or not, but when Tom Hood showed me how to use a similar jig when I was a teenager, this is what he did. I think if you put the masking tape on top of the ties, it's likely to sag between ties, and the resulting spacing will be inaccurate.

I mark the middle of the occasional tie before I place them on the masking tape (mark down); these marks help to place the strip on the centre lines we laid out before.

I also used the jig to lay out the ties through the leads of my turnouts. The frogs and points will get special treatment, but the lead is basically plain track that happens to overlap. To make this easier, I wrote the tie lengths on the jig; then it was simply a matter of controlling the piles of ties and plunking them in the appropriate slots.

When all is said and done, we need a little less imagination to see where the tracks are going to go. You can see now that there is not much space at the end of the ties before the embankment drops down into the river. Indeed, Jim pointed out that they're under-cut for a short ways. That is accurate for Pembroke, and we will have the head-block ties of a couple of turnouts sticking out in thin air.

One final note: make sure the glue is dry before taking the masking tape off!

Rene Gourley
Modelling Pembroke, Ontario in Proto:87

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Reply 0
arthurhouston

Plastic Jig

I had plastic jigs to go this assume they still make them.

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Rene Gourley renegourley

Commercial variants

I believe you are right: there are loads of commercial versions of this.  By making your own, you get to choose the tie spacing (24.75" for me).

Rene Gourley
Modelling Pembroke, Ontario in Proto:87

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Bernd

Tie Jig

Right out of the pages of the 1960's Model Railroader. Nice to see somebody still makes jigs for themselves. I used a table saw to cut the slots in the one I made for O and On30. Faster then trying to glue all them spacers. You still did a nice job. Instead of writing on the wood for your tie lengths for turnouts you can use a piece of paper  and tape it down.  That way you can use the same portion of the jig to do turnout ties.

It's made from MDF and the slots were cut into a piece of pine board. I cut shallow slots in it so you can stick tape on top to pull out the ties.

I need to make one for the HO set of gauges, 3' and 30".

Bernd

 

New York, Vermont & Northern Rwy. - Route of the Black Diamonds - NCSWIC

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Rene Gourley renegourley

Very nice

Thanks for sharing!

Rene Gourley
Modelling Pembroke, Ontario in Proto:87

Read my MRH blog
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Ronald48

Nice work, Rene!

Rene, very nice work you do here. I read that article in the MRP a long time ago and was impressed with your idea's and work. Later I met you in Holland on the Proto convention in Utrecht where you demonstrated the fine standards of Proto87.

Hope to see this on coming alive. Keep up the good things!!

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Rene Gourley renegourley

Thanks Ronald48

I'm going to keep trying to share "good things!"

Rene Gourley
Modelling Pembroke, Ontario in Proto:87

Read my MRH blog
Read my Wordpress blog

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