Matt and Jon came over today.
Matt picked up right where he left off last week, installing more manual throws. He's getting pretty good at it too. He finished 6 more today, including two that control a Ross 3 way.
That 3 way is pretty nifty, when both knobs are pushed in the route is straight. Pull the top knob and the route is to the right, the bottom and it's to the left. And if you want to go from either curved route to the other, just pull the knob and it will just drag the other set of points and the other knob will follow.
Here they are from the underside.
Straight.
Right.
Left.
Matt got the near end done and half of the far end of the Ford Plant overflow yard. Next time he'll finish those two and start the plant tracks.
I made a mistake having Patrick use Bondo to fill in the screw holes and seams on the fascia. Then I made the situation worse by butchering the surface with the sander. I had given it a coat of flat black, and it looked horrible.
Jon to the rescue. He made it look much better using his theater skills. He tinted some lightweight Spackle to a dark gray and sanded it smooth, then gave it all another coat of flat black. The final coat will be a semi-gloss black.
While they were working on all that, I was trying to clean up the workbench and get my head back in the game by making a to do list and a schedule to complete various projects. The goal is to have the whole thing looking sort of finished and fully operational by the National Narrow Gauge Convention in 2018.
We had one minor problem today, which was, Matt and Jon were getting in each others way working in the same aisle. Next Thursday, Jon and I will hang more fascia in the second aisle while Matt keeps working on the switches in the first. Problem solved.