Hey Guys,
I mentioned this topic once before in one of the other forums and I was asked to document the process I use for making my own home-made ballast. I'm not sure if this is the correct forum to post this, but here goes. Note that I've included pictures showing the process.
In the first picture, this is the stone dust I obtained from my local stone quarry. I offered to pay them, but they gave me (in total) four 5-gallon buckets. Boy, were they heavy.
In the second picture, I use a coarse pasta strainer to take that stone dust and sifted it into a glass baking dish.
In the third picture, this shows the results of that first sifting. This is talus I also use on my layout.
In the fourth picture, this is the result of that first sifting.
In the fifth picture, I take that stone dust from the first sifting (shown in the fourth picture) and sift it through a finer strainer. This is the result after that second sifting, and it is the ballast I use for my track - which is mostly Atlas track.
In the last picture, this is the resulting dust after the multiple siftings - I just discard this.
This cost me nothing, just some of my time. In total, I've created enough ballast to cover my entire layout - over 400 feet of track.
It's certainly a cheaper route than buying ballast!
I hope you folks can use this same technique if you need to create ballast for your layout.
Thanks,
Jeff