What progress you are making, the baseboards look great, and what a home you have put them into, such a view (perfect when you are ballasting hour after hour) I don't know anything about the American railroad, model or real, but don't let a salesman sell you a DCC loco and a DC controller.
I am sure that with all the help here on the forum, and also your local friends, you will soon have some stock to run around on your new track. how long will the bridge be, could you put a piece of the base board across the gap, and build the bridge up to it.
I am really looking forward to watching your layout grow.
Alan, I bought Atlas code 100 track, so no problem with low profile wheels. I took a serious look at the code 83 track, but after doing a simple "sag" test between the two I opted for the code 100, (plus it was quite a bit cheaper). It was quite stronger than the code 83. I did this because I intend to use the Woodland Scenics foam track bed under the track, so I wanted as much vertical strength as I could get.
Didn't play golf or lay track. I did however get all the top boards screwed in place and I have one layer of foam 3/4" glued in place over it all! :wow:Happy:wow:Happy:wow:Happy
Tomorrow will be a day of rest, then Monday, look out, cause the next layer of foam should get done. At that point, I will begin drawing out the track on the foam. The inclines from Woodland Scenics should be here on Wednesday.
I can here the whistle blowing in the distance….(if I get DCC with sound) :cool wink
Can we have some images of the baseboards with the foam on them, as I am really interested to see them, also have you decided what you are going to do about the bridge section
Sure thing Alan, pictures will be forth coming. I took a peak and the foam this morning and everything looks like it stayed down in place. That's a good sign. The next layer is foam to foam, so hope the adhesive works as good to the foam as it does to the wood.
I have decided to build temporary bridges, probably out of wood that can be removed once the trestle has been built. The only issue at this point is determining what length the trestle will be without the mountain there to help figure it out. I think the best solution will be to use my layout drawing to get the dimension I need, then I will just have to build the mountain to fit! I guess that's the kind of "problems" I've been waiting for!
Just took these pictures of the first layer of 3/4" thick styrofoam (blue). You can also see what the morning sun looks like coming in all those windows.
The adhesive I used is shown better in this picture.
I closed my sliding glass doors that lead into the house, and opened two windows for the night. That helped to get rid of the fumes from the glue, although they were not too bad at any time that I could tell.
Your are right Bob(K), it is well liked here. The cost was $12.99 per 4' x 8' sheet at 3/4" thickness. Still adds up over a large layout, but I really like the advantages it offers. I can carve it out to go lower than a surface mounted track, should produce some sound deadening, and gives a very flat surface to model on, pins inserted at a slight angle will stay put and hold well.
Worked all morning and have finished putting on the blue foam (2 layers). I miss calculated my needs somewhat, thought I would use 10 sheets on the layout and only used 9. I bought two extra sheets to use for building up height on the layout, now I have three sheets. It's a 14 mile trip to return one sheet, plus a little flimsy hauling just one sheet, so guess I will store it and see what happens. Just maybe I'll need it for mountains or something.
This now needs to sit and dry completely, may take a day or two to accomplish that. So the plans are to play golf tomorrow, then a trip to the train store to get the Woodland Scenics Inclines on Wednesday.
In the meantime I have been reading up on installing flex track in some old Model Railroad magazines. A little knowledge can't hurt, can it?
Wayne
PS: Somebody pinch me, I can't believe I'm this far along already. :wow:wow:wow
you have a beutifull blank page now so the fun begins now
As Perry has said you cannot have to much materials once you begin terraforming you will use that styrofoam up very quickly.
Anybody in the UK you can buy 8ft x 4ft sheets of polystyrene from buiders merchants it is used for insulation on new build projects you can buy it in varying thicknesses between 20mm up to 100mm and it is not expensive either.
What a base to start from Wayne, I'm really impressed, once you start to lay the flexi track down things will really move on at a pace, have you brought any stock yet, as this does help when laying track, and points, and if you can have two wire's to the end of a section, running a loco through helps even more.
Enjoy your round of golf, what handicap do you have.