Model Railroad Miscellany
Sunday, February 16, 2025
Surfliners As Modelable Prototype
Sunday, February 9, 2025
A Little More Work On The T-TRAK Module
The trees are from Bachmann. I'll be adding more to the area as work continues.
Most of the work I did over the past week was under the module deck. I've pretty much given up on the idea of ever bringing my modules to a T-TRAK meet -- a Southern California group was starting before COVID, but it quit for the duration, and then the venues raised their insurance requirements, so I doubt if this will ever really restart. In any case, I'd already been building modules that weren't electrically compatible with the T-TRAK standards, so I'm basically satisfying myself building small layouts in a home environment.
But under the decks, I'm installing things like DCC switch machine decoders and NCE Illuminators that let me run Woodland Scenics Just Plug devices off the DCC bus. This is what the underside of one of my typical modules looks like:
This will allow me to add featues like signals in the future, without the need to go under a conventional layout to make changes -- all I do is flip the module over to work on it. There's a lot of potential in T-TRAK besides just running big layouts in gyms and convention centers.Sunday, February 2, 2025
Restarting Work On My Newest T-TRAK Module
The screws will be either painted or covered with bits of ground foam to make them less conspicuous. I also started to rethink the scenery, beginning with a new color of Rustoleum Nutmeg to replace the yellow-brown I started with. I also began to notice from wstching train videos that even in fairly flat country, there's often a low berm on one side of the tracks or the other, so I made this up with some Sculptamold. This willl be covered with trees and brush.
I'll put farm buildings and more trees on the other side of the berm.
Sunday, January 19, 2025
Klawndyke's T-TRAK Lackawanna Concrete Arch Bridge
Sunday, January 12, 2025
Homemade Contemporary-era Building Flats
Now and then I've been playing around with saving screen shots off YouTube or other photo sources on the web and seeing if I can make my own building flats that fit the modern era, at least as a stopgap. My first experiment was an N scale compatible flat based on a YouTube screen shot of the Morrow Hotel, which overlooks the Amtrak Northeast Corridor just north of Union Station in Washington. It's posed on a single-wide T-TRAK module in the photo below.
I made it using the cardboard from a Triscuit carton. I printed the screen shot out on ordinary printing paper, glued it to the cardboard using Elmer's glue, pressed the cardboard on a sheet of glass under weights overnight, and assembled the box with more of the carton braced with used fireplace matches.More recently, I decided to see if I could extend this into a full backdrop that would fit the whole width of a single-wide T-TRAK module, which is 12-1/8". I found a photo of a concrete parking garage that printed out very close to N scale and built a second building flat using a second Triscuit carton the same way:
Right now, this is just a proof-of-concept, but I feel encouraged. Commercial building flats actually need quite a bit of work with Photoshop to edit out perspectve effects and random unwanted details, but the result here is at least a lot closer to what I see riding Amtrak on YouTube, and as I see more opportunities on the web, I'll do other experiments.Sunday, January 5, 2025
Track Relaying On Inglenook Complete
Sunday, December 22, 2024
Programming A Walthers Proto SW900 With ESU LokSound
The other feature I'm less enthusiastic about is the "prime mover delay" available on full-featured LokSound decoders (but not the economy LokSound decoders on Walthers Mainline locos). In additioon to normal momentum from CVs 3 and 4, this adds an additional acceleration delay while the sound of the prime mover spools up in the decoder.
Since I've never driven a prototype diesel, I don't know how much this additional throttle delay actually reflects the prototype. The main problem I see from a model perspective is that this makes a loco equipped with an ESU LokSound decoder incompatible for consisting with locos that have decoders from other manufacturers, since the ESU equipped loco won't accelerate as quickly as the others -- and that would even include Walthers Mainline locos with the economy LokSound decoder.
The way to fix this is simply to change CV 124 to 16 to eliminate the prime mover delay. Then the model will accelerate compatibly with other locos.