Friday, July 28, 2017

Reopening The Main Line Through West Zenith

With the major project of rewiring the Zenith Sub finsihed, I'm cleaning thing up in order to reopen the main line for full operation. Below is a test run on Main 1 past City Coal and the Zenith Knitting Mills. The switch at left is CP Conn.

I need to pay a lot of attention to CP Weat Zenith, which marks the end of the Zenith Sub. A lot of the ballasting was done with Woodland Scenics 20 or more years ago and needs a lot of touching up. The Clinchfield ballast car is a reminder of all the ballast work I have to do. The signal gantry is crooked and needs to have that fixed and a broken wire repaired.

The two shots below show how the old ballast has had to have shims added over the years and needs to be touched up.

CP West Zenith never got a switch machine or a relay shed. While it has a propane tank, it also needs a switch heater.

Here is WP 709 with a WP track cleaning car.

Wednesday, July 19, 2017

Train DVDs And Early N&W Diesels

There were several railroads that were hard for me to railfan as a kid growing up on the east coast (my family moved to California, as a practical matter not long after I got my driver's license, since I went away to college about then as well). One was the N&W, which until the 1964 Wabash-NKP merger was hard to reach at all, and after the merger basically just occupied flyover country anyhow. So maybe because of that, it always fascinated me, not just for the steam, but for the interesting diesel operations.

DVD railfan footage has been just as hard to get for the period roughly 1957-1970. Emery Gulash has some N&W shots in the Penn Central Volume I Part I, and also in later shots on his Wabash DVD after the merger. Green Frog has some other DVDs with N&W material from this period. I get everything I can!

Here are some recent acquisitions. First, Walthers was clearing out its last run of GP30s, ans one turned up on line at an excellent price.

I found an Atlas/Kato yellowbox C425 in N&W blue for a very good price on eBay:

I installed DCC with a Digitrax DH165A0 and replaced the incandescent headlight bulb with an LED. These yellowbox centuries run beautifully and can be great bargains on eBay.

Here's an older Atlas Trainman RS-36 that I recently installed a decoder in:

Tuesday, July 11, 2017

Blast From The Past

I was going through the great swap meet we all have in our closets and pulled out some items that had been packed away since we moved into this house about 25 years ago. Here's a photo of the layout I was working on in our former place:

The locos are Rail Power Products kits on Proto Power West chassis. None has been converted to DCC yet, but I still have them. The benchwork in view was moved to our current place and is part of the current layout.

Here are some Con-Cor hoppers that in fact may have been in the train behind the Conrail locos. I find they were optimized for my current style of operation, with low-temperature alloy poured in the crevices in the underframe to add weight, Kadees mounted with screws, and metal wheels:

Here's a Roundhouse RBL car whose prorotype I saw pretty frequently in the 1980s and lettered with Microscale decals:

I think these hauled mostly wine. Here's a prototype shot. The model is very approximate, but it was the best you could do in the 1980s without major kitbashing.

Wednesday, July 5, 2017

Reopening The Oak Hill Branch

During the rewiring project, I wound up having to move a lot of stuff aside, and because it was convenient, a lot of it got put into the area where the Oak Hill Branch is located.

Naturally, I've got to clean a lot of this off. At the same time, I decided to make things a little easier to operate by installing a Throttle Pocket on the fascia:

Throttle Pockets or equivalent have some real advantages. They keep the scenery a little more protected by providing a definite place to put the throttle. They also make it a little less likely that the throttle will be knocked off the layout and be damaged.

Although the Eastern Division, Zenith Sub main line was converted to DCC stationary decoders, the Oak Hill Branch is keeping toggles to control Tortoise switch machines:

I had to do track cleaning and re-railing of equipment:

My Bachmann Interstate RS-3 is a regular on the Oak Hill Branch. I used it do to the switching work involved with repositioning the cars:

There's still work to do, but at least I can now run a train to serve the mine: