Originally Posted by cmscanuck:
Dale,
After giving it a little thought, I was thinking of something like this:
- a 1x4 frame, 48"x94" in length. I would screw down a sheet of plywood to one side, to keep things rigid, and hinge the other, with some kind of knobs that screwed into the frame to hold down that sheet.
- I was thinking maybe an 1 1/4" x 96" Closet Rod or wooden dowel (granted any piece of pipe could work) for the table to rotate on. They are built to hold a hefty amount of clothing, I'd imagine they could hold a lightly build table. The 1x4's would provide rigidity across the rod and keep it from bowing to much. Granted, the pain here is cutting 1 1/4" holes through all your 1x4s. A lot of fitting and adjustment would need to be done.
- I'd also cut a couple 3/4" holes in each 1x4s (on the side opposite the hinge, maybe 9" and 12" from the table edge) to allow for wiring to pass through, one hole for each layout to keep wiring separate. The wiring for the hinged part would have to be extra long to run back to the hinge, and back up the other side. The hole for the wiring going from the controllers would be placed near the closet rod, and the table only allowed to spin back and forth via a stop, and not completely around to prevent the wires from twisting.
- There would also be an outer frame that went around the table, with a couple knobs on either side that screwed into the rotating frame to keep it from rocking as trains moved.
Having HO and wanting to have a small tinplate layout as well, this is something I will definitely be following!
Exactly. I think this nails to whole idea perfectly. I hope someone does something like this and posts pictures, I would love to see it.
I think this is a fantastic idea! And I want to thank people who had this idea and inform you now I am going to shamelessly steal it for a project I see coming up.
I am thinking about a version of this idea as shown below for my grandkids. they are fast outgrowing the wooden Thomas layout I built them sometime back. The have a nice play loft near their rooms but not a lot of room for a big layout that is out all the time. Something like one of these two ideas would be good for them. I'm going to talk to my son and daughter in law about whether, etc. . . .
In either version, the thing folks up against the wall: maybe a few inchs away so that I can hang some scenery buildings on it, etc. In this version, there are train layouts on both sides and it swivels for them.
In this variation there is only one larger layout that unfolds.