Ace,
Could you explain your comments in more detail. Any special wiring needed, isolating pins etc. Can this layout be in with conventional engines or with command only? Where do the trains start from. do they start in different directions, what position do the switches start in? I understand what you are saying but I can't picture it. Thanks for any help you can give.
Looks confusing but also looks to be a lot of fun to run. Talk about keeping the operator on his toes this certainly does it.
Watch Dan's video with the two trains in action and visualize cutoff tracks added on the sides. If both trains go into the opposite cutoff tracks at the same time, then revert to the figure-8 pattern in the opposite directions, they don't collide. Yes, the operator has to keep the trains timed just right, as in the video. But that makes it interesting, and a lot different from two trains orbiting on concentric non-intersecting ovals. An electronic person could figure out some circuitry to run the trains automatically without colliding.
As for control, conventional could work with phased transformers and block boundaries in the middle of the cutoff tracks, if both trains run at about the same speed. I think it would be about the most interesting two-train operation that you can fit on a 36" x 79" door, especially with buildings and scenery added to conceal portions of the track.
Thanks to Dan for posting the video !