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Posted - April 05 2020 : 5:10:10 PM
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Seeing Kb's cool layout made me want to pull up some stuff and re-arrange the "furniture." Good use of time, I like the feel of it better now.
Lot of accessories and stuff competing for straight track, of which there is not a whole ton that can take it. Moved this coal loader to this spot, and I like it much better than the corner I had it wedged into.
Moving the hospital over so that I could be looked straight into has a much better visual than trying to peer at the details sideways. The US 1 track is all removed, waiting on the new trolley bus system, and those few extra centimeters of clearance makes a lot of difference. I've got various "planted" trees being held up by whatever I could grab to let the glue dry overnight.
The Twin Peaks is something that Micro posted a while back, and I had to have one. It's been a real challenge to make it fit, and I've tried many versions, including working it in as part of an EL. I extended the baseboard four inches with a few pieces of cardboard, and it's nice to have this crazy Life Like piece up again.
Another space hogger was the passenger station, formerly wedged on a corner. Did not look right at all. Reduced the size of the Jade Fog plant and moved her into the empty space. Ah, better.
One of my favorite vignettes, this excavation of a bird skull had been pushed to a back corner of Armadilloville, and I relocated it behind City Hall, where it will get a lot more views.
Armodilloville was built around this Tyco Strap Hanger Set, and it became really, really hard to pack things in. I didn't want to go too large, but eventually I had to add on a 4x4, which is working out better than expected.
Armadilloville has had several permutations, much like Glacial Drift, but the prerunner was an attempt of the doing a copy of the track work on the Tyco Layout Expander. I never liked it once I got it up, the switches tended to foul trains, and the inner loop was to be so small, and hard to get into that eventually the Tyco Muse laid her hand upon me and said, "go with a overlapping double oval." That design is really easy to work with, doesn't challenge the trains to derail, and has lent itself to an easy 4x4 extension.
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Posted - April 05 2020 : 6:22:25 PM
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Any plans to ballast your track?
The gravel that comes from roofs' makes awesome ballast. When my family's roof got re - done, my dad and I went up, and scooped up all the ballast that fell into the gutter into a bucket for future use.
I will use it as set dressing when I make the sets for my series
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Posted - April 05 2020 : 6:28:18 PM
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Nice to see the updates Jeff. Always time for change.
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Posted - April 05 2020 : 8:50:08 PM
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Blax, I've done ballast, hated ballast, and it nearly drove me to the funny farm. Because I'm doing a deliberately subscale Tyco based layout, I happily ignored doing ballast.
On the OO layout, which is scaled up, to a point, I put in cork road bed, sprayed with textured gray spray paint. I'm really fine with that. It has a course texture, and very easy to revise, as needed. Not a stupendous appearance, but oh Lord, when ballast finds its way, as it will, into expensive Hornby switch points, there is the devil to pay.
It is a curious point that man is the only species that creates problems for himself to solve- like ballast. That being said, ballast away my friend!
Edited by - Chops124 on April 05 2020 8:52:33 PM
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