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Thank you, John and Matt!!  Yes I quickly decided not to take Mount Brian apart for either oversight!  

That sounds great when you were a kid, John!  When I was in Cub Scouts in the mid ‘60s, we took a trip to Pittsburgh Northside to see the model railroad and village in the old Buhl Planetarium.  The model railroad still going strong but now in the Carnegie Science Center. 

Hi guys, seems like forever since I have had anything to post here. Patrick was supposed to come over today, but cancelled, so I had the day all to myself. I have been slowly working on a project, just a few hours at a time. This one has been on my to do for a couple years.

I bought a K-line 21" baggage car and and matching combine as a pair. They were Pennsy, but I can fix that. I'm just working on the combine for now. I'm turning it into an ex GN baggage / dormitory. Here's the car in its short lived BN paint, which is what I'm going to do.

bnp710

I'll turn the baggage car into this one, by removing the long middle skirts and moving the doors and repainting.

NP 401-1

The car is first reduced to parts, leaving the aluminum extrusion.

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I have this book of early Amtrak car plans, and much to my surprise, this one was in it. It's nice having some dimensions to work from. Unfortunately, the car is a couple feet too long, and there's no good way to shorten it. The body would be easy enough, but the chassis is a huge can of worms. For a couple feet, I'll pass.

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I put masking tape over the sides of the car, but in hindsight, it wasn't worth trying to mark out the windows and doors.

IMG_8643

It's not easy trying to draw on this thing when it has the rounded roof and skirts.

IMG_8644

Time to lose the skirts. I clamped the body to a saw horse, then took my saber saw with a metal cutting blade, they came right off.

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After some filing and grinding with my sander, the bottom edge is straight and smooth

IMG_8646

Next up, filling the windows and doors.

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Ran trains for 5 hours for the tri-state layout open house tour.  Trains ran great, had a really good turnout for a rain soaked afternoon.  Had almost 50 guest view the layout.

I have been open for this tour since it began and this is the best turnout I have ever had for it.

Had guest from 4 states.  Maryland, Delaware, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania.

For me this is the best part of the hobby,  Sharing it with others.

I am now ready for my  14 Christmas open houses during the month of December.  This will be the 32nd year for these.

Karl

Big_Boy_4005 posted:

Hi guys, seems like forever since I have had anything to post here. Patrick was supposed to come over today, but cancelled, so I had the day all to myself. I have been slowly working on a project, just a few hours at a time. This one has been on my to do for a couple years.

I bought a K-line 21" baggage car and and matching combine as a pair. They were Pennsy, but I can fix that. I'm just working on the combine for now. I'm turning it into an ex GN baggage / dormitory. Here's the car in its short lived BN paint, which is what I'm going to do.

bnp710

I'll turn the baggage car into this one, by removing the long middle skirts and moving the doors and repainting.

NP 401-1

The car is first reduced to parts, leaving the aluminum extrusion.

IMG_8640IMG_8641

I have this book of early Amtrak car plans, and much to my surprise, this one was in it. It's nice having some dimensions to work from. Unfortunately, the car is a couple feet too long, and there's no good way to shorten it. The body would be easy enough, but the chassis is a huge can of worms. For a couple feet, I'll pass.

IMG_8642

I put masking tape over the sides of the car, but in hindsight, it wasn't worth trying to mark out the windows and doors.

IMG_8643

It's not easy trying to draw on this thing when it has the rounded roof and skirts.

IMG_8644

Time to lose the skirts. I clamped the body to a saw horse, then took my saber saw with a metal cutting blade, they came right off.

IMG_8645

After some filing and grinding with my sander, the bottom edge is straight and smooth

IMG_8646

Next up, filling the windows and doors.

Elliot, that sure is some wonderful work you have going on there! I would have a hard time doing that, not because lack of skills, but what if I did Screw up, That's where the money comes into play! LOL I cant wait to see the out come!

Elliot, I hope you will start a thread and describe (with photos) how you are going about this project--it would be an excellent stand-along thread.

For myself, I finished the third streetlamp repair--the post had separated from the base.  A tip posted on my thread led me to try some super glue gel by Locktite; AND IT WORKED.  So, on this minor repair project I went 3 for 3 in success.

Also went to Wal-Mart this evening a bought some flat white paint to paint the 4' x 6' board the Christmas tree will sit on and have two loops of track around it. 

Before the trip to WM, I test fit the Gargraves/Ross sectional track and GG flex track.  I thought this wise because the inner loop of 032 GG will include two bridges (one LIONEL and one Plastruct O scale truss bridge)  sitting on LIONEL piers which are fairly wide at the base which are by the lack of length (only 6') darn close to the exits of the outer loop curves.

Still need to test the LIONEL uncoupler/loader switches that I rewired for several PW accessories, as well as layout the LEDs for lighting some buildings--but, I'm having fun.

Our lives revolve around our puppy Sweet Pea right now, but I still managed some success today!
After drilling holes through the bottoms of each strcutre on the layout, just in case, I installed all the Woodland Scenics plug-and-play system for the lighting. All the controls are on the panel now. Next, it's just a matter of running the wires up to the structures. I'd had all the wiring stuff for a while now, and decided if waited long enough.
The flag stop at Hunter is almost directly above the master switch, so it only took just a few seconds to get the light into that structure. There's no interior inside, so I added enough fogginess to the windows so you couldn't really tell, with dull finish scotch tape from the inside.

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Can't wait to get to the other flag stop at Winner, which has a full interior and an open door...

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Doesn't look like much compared to what you folks have been up to this week, but this is the first step to getting around my furnace so I'm happy about it!KIMG1351 The original plan was to go behind the furnace, but that route is too close to the business end for comfort.  As a positve I've realized I'll get a longer run this way!  It actually looked a little like a layout before I put the boxes back up there.  As usual please excuse the photo. I have an older phone and barely any lights down there at the moment. 

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RSJB18 posted:

I actually did somethings on my layout yesterday! Been a long time since I did more than look at it.

I while back I got the free Hummer from Menards. I only had a 5.5v wall wart which worked but was a bit too bright. I found a 4.8v from a cell phone recently and hooked it up yesterday. Much better now.

Before and after

2018-09-24 06.03.382018-11-23 16.36.34

2018-11-23 16.44.13

I also added a power drop to one side of my elevated loop. Been putting it off for a while but I was inspired by Arnold's recent efforts. Had a bit of a brain fart though and forgot to run the wire to the switch for the block instead of the buss bar right off the KW. Didn't take me long to realize I'm and idiot and fix it.

I'm also swapping out rolling stock and locos for the Holidays. Been running the same stuff for so long that it's been getting boring. I'm really trying not to overload my small layout with trains so I can do some switching. I think I'm going with a PRR theme for now, we'll see. Put out my Yuengling cars for the first time. Thought they would be a good match for my new PRR ALCO's.

2018-11-24 07.49.23

Now a bit of catching up

Mark- the Christmas layout is looking good

Dr. Joe- welcome back. The train room looks great.

Johan- another beautiful scene.

Mike- great to see some track work related progress in the train room.

Lee- another nice car project

Brian- If I was a west coast guy those BNSF locos would be on my layout for sure.

John- nice work on the bridges and gorge.

Arnold- glad you got the signals fixed. One of my winter projects is to start adding some signals to my layout.

Enjoy- Bob

Bob: Thank you.

Johan

  Last night making a double reverse, single mainline connector carpet central dumbell layout, I used up every curve I own along with two new to me Marx switches I got from Pingman the other day. After adding some pins to help bridge the point gaps better, doing some track cleaning of those dregs of the bottom of the track box,, and isolating a few rails for anti derail triggers,  I got Grandmas fat wheel Commodoore Vanderbilt running flawlessly in turnouts for the first time ever... So I tore it down  and rebuilt in favor of an offset dogbone loop and a very long siding.  Today I'm going to look at my relays and see if I can't do two staged trains, maybe in opposite  directions.  

On the 4' x 6' board I painted flat white last night, I laid out the track and bridges so that I would know where to run the RGB LEDs; removed the track; laid the LEDs (3 reels worth); and, tested them--everything checked out.

Following this, the table and LEDs were covered with white snow/batting and the LEDs tested again, this time for the visual effect.  These LEDs were the ones mistakenly shipped to a number of OGRers a couple of years ago when the Chinese distributor ran out of warm white 3528 reels.  A neat feature is the remote control that gets the LEDs to light in various colors and patterns.

I'll post pics or a brief video tonight or in the a.m. after I get the track, trestles, piers, and bridges on the table.

Last edited by Pingman

Lee, the building lighting is looking great! I hope you keep posting as you get them lit up!

Dr. Joe, your Dept. 56 layout is looking wonderful! I am with Mark, is sure going to be the old flat layout around Christmas time!

I didn't get much don't this week or weekend as we had the kids and grandkids, plus had to work yesterday and today! I did manage to add 4" to my side yard, cause I had to widen it out to fit my new train station from a forum member! I will try and get some pictures tomorrow!

Finished disassembly of my two-color printing press to make room for a new layout.  Movers wanted a moving fee plus a monthly storage fee as they look for a customer for the press.  I decided the open ended monthly storage fee could get costly, and it provided no incentive for the movers to sell the press.

I hated to cut the press up, but progress sometimes takes sacrifice.  It took eight days to strip it down to parts.  Now I have a 15 x 18 room I can use for a HO or O-Gauge layout.

Sincerely, John Rowlen

 

Since I've got one of my cases of 0300 insomnia,  I decided to fabricate a couple of FastTrack actuators for the JRM Museum layout. 

GEDC1315

The Marx crossing ringer uses a short section of insulated rail to light the light and ring the bell. 

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This actuator, a former gi-raffe ramp track...

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...will be used to operate one of these: 

Naturally,  Norma Bates Kitteh had to assist: 

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And here's a demonstration! 

Mitch 

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