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MWB - Yes, Micro Engineering is selling rail. Their quantities are greater then my needs and they have discontinued selling ties.  Lou Cross would sell rail in smaller quantities - good for my purposes.   But thank you - a useful contribution.  BTW, how is everything in Omtose Phellack ?  !!!

Pete - Looked up Jay C's profile and he says he is owner of "Right of Way".  Is he contactable? Or what is the current status of the business?

Last edited by mark s
mark s posted:

MWB - Yes, Micro Engineering is selling rail. Their quantities are greater then my needs and they have discontinued selling ties.  Lou Cross would sell rail in smaller quantities - good for my purposes.   But thank you - a useful contribution.

Ah, well you need less than a bundle of rail, that's different - maybe someone here would have that to sell you?

Ties are easily gotten from Kappler as already noted.

 BTW, how is everything in Omtose Phellack ?  !!!

Very quiet.....  It is an old and isolated place full of emptiness.  An ideal place to distance one's self from the masses.

Pete - Looked up Jay C's profile and he says he is owner of "Right of Way".  Is he contactable? Or what is the current status of the business?

Shoot Jay an e-mail and he will probably respond

mark s posted:

MWB - Yes, Micro Engineering is selling rail. Their quantities are greater then my needs and they have discontinued selling ties.

1) Suggest the WTB for code XYZ/Quantity rail.  I have some that I'll never use, but a) have to find it, and b) have no idea the code XYZ/Quantity until I resolve a).

2) I believe Micro Engineering lost their tie source.  It's ditto for HO, HOn3 ties from them, too.   OTOH, the number of our (LHS) customers who even REMEMBER hand-laying track, much less having the time/inclination/skill/cajones to do so anymore, has seemingly dried up.  (The allocated peg-wall space has long been given over to more 'exciting' products with more frequent 'turns'.)

3) There are a surprising number of folks out there who have the equipment and time (small kerf modeler's table saw, e.g.) to cut you a big bunch of ties....for a negotiable fee.  But you have to tap into a different group of folks.   Any woodcarving/woodworking local groups you could contact?  Any old fashioned/specialty/custom lumber yards (NOT the 'Big Box' purveyors of pre-cut lumber!!) who might have a lead on a customer of theirs who works in the smaller realms of cut wood? (We do in our area.)  These are sources of possibilities. Of course, the same individuals would not likely want to crank out repetitive volumes of the same sticks to supply a whole industry....ergo, your/our/ME's problem du jour.

Just some random thoughts....FWIW.

KD


3) There are a surprising number of folks out there who have the equipment and time (small kerf modeler's table saw, e.g.) to cut you a big bunch of ties....for a negotiable fee.

I cut almost all of the ties on my layout using a 12" band saw with a 1/2" blade using 3 different stops clamped into the table.  Get some good clear dry white pine, poplar or whatever that you want to use and you can turn out plenty of ties, fast.  Try to keep the fingers firmly attached to the hands!

But, despite the advantage being that you get ties with saw marks and some variation in color, you still might want to use the neatly polished cut ties from Kappler.

Yes, I'm here but I don't know all the rules for OGR so I try to keep a low profile.  Right-O'-Way is in business but the website still isn't up.  My photographer is a little slow.

Please contact me directly for further info.

 My email address is listed in my profile but Mark's isn't so I can't contact him.

Jay

Last edited by Jay C

With the right equipment, ties are relatively easy to make. I use a table saw for the first pass, the wider top/bottom. This leaves circular marks on the most visible part of tie. I made a special drop in for the table saw so the thin stock wouldn't fall into or get wedged in the blade slot.  For the height, I use the band saw. I clamp a fence to the table, and can cut several pieces at one time. Using a chop saw, I again cut several pieces at one time. I use a Lamp Black and water mixture to stain the ties, then spray them with water base urethane floor finish to give them a shiny tar look, and it also seals the stain.    These ties were cut with the band saw on the wider part, as is evidenced by the vertical lines. I took my measurements from several ties that were tossed to the side of a local line.

Don

 

 

 

 

MOW loads 07 19 14 010

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mark s posted:

MWB - Keppler sells only 8' 6" ties. I desire 9'........think they look better with our 5' gauge rail spacing. Lou Cross had sold 9 footers.

Kappler does sell tie stock to cut to whatever length you like - useful for those funkier switches.  I have a bundle of 50 somewhere in the shop.

But, I'd still just cut my own - commercial ties are just way too perfect and polished smooth.  I guess I can live with the 1/8" shorter length or cut them to whatever in length then, but overall appearance of the wood is something else.  Just don't make ties from red oak. 

Last edited by mwb
mark s posted:

Just don't make ties from red oak.

......or styrene !!

That's what I use for mine, but they are for loads and such, not for hand laid track. I work for a school district, and we get a lot of deliveries on skids, so I use the oak slats. I save the worst looking pieces for scrap ties. Glad you found a source for your needs.

Don

I made all of mine out of white pine.  Probably better to look for sugar pine, but my ties for the most part worked great.  I glued them with white carpenters glue, and they were attached well enough to survive a belt sander.

I used a table saw to cut the sticks, then a mitre box to get the correct length with a very fine hand saw.

The suppliers are telling me clear sugar pine is getting hard to find and very expensive.  They also mentioned Blue Pine which I had never heard of.  Apparently there is a beetle that's killing millions of pine trees and the wood from these trees has blue streaks running through it.  My first though was, hey we're going to paint or stain them anyway, what difference will it make?  I'm curious what others think so please share your thoughts.  The other thing I read about this infestation doesn't mention sugar pine (the preferred material) so maybe it's a moot point.  Need to study some on this subject.

Hey Chris,

Did you get my email about the construction of the tower for your drive?  Really wanted to talk to you about it.

Jay

Last edited by Jay C
Jay C posted:

The suppliers are telling me clear sugar pine is getting hard to find and very expensive. 

That's what they were saying 20 years ago, too. And, why I cut my own......

The also mentioned Blue Pine which I had never heard of.  Apparently there is a beetle that's killing millions of pine trees and the wood from these trees has blue streaks running through it. 

New one to me.

My first though was, hey we're going to paint or stain them anyway, what difference will it make?  I'm curious what others think so please share your thoughts.

Stained all mine with MinWax in a coffee can back when coffee came in metal cans......having ties made of several types of wood results in some variation - if everything is perfectly uniform it's too perfect.

The other thing I read about this infestation doesn't mention sugar pine (the preferred material) so maybe it's a moot point.  Need to study some on this subject.

Just getting any good clear stable wood is hard to do and increasingly expensive......  The old shelving in my labs is 100% clear sugar pine..........

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OGR Publishing, Inc., 1310 Eastside Centre Ct, Ste 6, Mountain Home, AR 72653
800-980-OGRR (6477)
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