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Thanks Donald for the kind words.

On the ballast I started using Hi Ball Ballast some years ago on a small portion of my layout.  My LHS - Dixie Union Station carried it, and there are from Cincinnati.  However a few years ago I got turned on the roofing roofing granules.  Several of the O Scale builders here in Cincinnati, including Bill Bramledge use this, and it looks great and is much less costly.  The dark ballast in these pictures is called weathered wood.  The lighter mainline ballast is a light grey they call white.  I got it at a local roofing supply company in 5 gal pails. 

 

Donald, 

It works great, make a trip to the local roofing supply house in your area, they can show you the different colors on a sample board (like shingles).  I brought some samples of commercial ballast to compare to it.  Also if you don't have a ballast spreader, consider the one from ballast king http://www.ogaugeconnection.co...ocs/BallastKing.html this really speeds things up.

Rich883 posted:

More work on the yard area.  There is a drop down access section that crosses 8 tracks to access my breaker panel.  I have been procrastinating on this section so decided to dive in.

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Hey Rich looks good eh    How deep is the bench work on the first pic? Are the tracks on the same level cause it looks like the tracks are different heights from the front to the back eh

Chad,

Thanks for the words of encouragement.  The depth of the benchwork in that section is 4’.

 The mainlines on the front and rear are a bit higher than the yard tracks,  I used cork roadbed under the track to get a bit of elevation on the mainlines and use the lighter ballast.  The yard tracks and sidings on my layout use no cork, and the track is directly on the homasote.

 

Last edited by Rich883

Rich, things are looking great!  I am thinking I need to add an icing platform to service my Spencer Packing Co. reefers.  I don't have room for one as large as yours, but I really like the the way you have done yours.

Also I am getting ready to ballast my tracks and need to check into roofing granules.  I am considering using sand for my Milwaukee Road branchline.  I ballasted a track that runs beside my river valley with sand and I love the color and looks of it.  But, I now think that the granules may be too fine.  I may try a coarser sand for the branchline.  

You are doing a beautiful job on your layout.  Thanks for sharing, it's very inspirational.

Art

Guys, thanks for the nice feedback.  Much of what I do on the layout I learened here on the forum from many of you.

I have been working on adding detail around the yard.  Here is a BTS kit of fire hose structures I picked up at a train show earlier this year.  I had never seen this kit, it makes three.  Evidently these were located around the yards.

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Last edited by Rich883

Thank you all for the kind words.

I completed and weathered to hose structures and places them on the layout in the yard and engine service area.

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The grain silo at the end the end of the layout needed a small office area.  I scratch built the office using black foamcore for the structural part and covered it with wood.

The roof used masking tape to look like rolled roofing.

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This is a Korber models roof top water tank.  I have some more to add.

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As always comments welcome.

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Good progress continues on the layout.

I added some Blair Line laser cut grade crossings - nit kit reasonable price - much better than scratch building, especially on a curve.

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New work on a coal mine area, I covered the taped up newspaper with a few coats of strucolight, it provides some texture and has a longer working time than hydrocal.

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The Coal Mine- Breaker is a scratch built structure, I used black foamcore for a base and covered with plastic sheets made to look like tin siding.

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I still have to weather the building, and then a bunch of scenery work on the site to create the mountainside and ground cover.

 

As always comments, questions and suggestions welcome.

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Last edited by Rich883
Rich883 posted:

Good progress continues on the layout.

I added some Branchline laser cut grade crossings - nit kit reasonable price - much better than scratch building, especially on a curve.

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Rich;

Looks like some great progress... looks wonderful. I have always been blown away by the little details on a layout, and these grade crossings are a perfect example. Could you tell me where you got the kit??? I have a station on a curve that could use some of these to cross to the opposite platform.

Thanks.

Rich883 posted:

Paul, first thanks for the nice words.

Second, I mis-typed the name of the company that makes the crossings, it is Blair Line, here is a link to their site with the crossings

http://www.blairline.com/ogradecrossings/

There are other that makes these type of items, but I found these to work well, and are affordable.

 

Thanks Rich, they look great. I'll have to order some when I get home tomorrow (assuming I can get home - NE Pennsylvania got hit by a blizzard on Friday!!!).

Rich883 posted:

Paul, first thanks for the nice words.

Second, I mis-typed the name of the company that makes the crossings, it is Blair Line, here is a link to their site with the crossings

http://www.blairline.com/ogradecrossings/

There are other that makes these type of items, but I found these to work well, and are affordable.

 

Hey Rich,

Wonderful grade crossings. What did you use to stain them?

 

Dave

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