Sunday, September 23, 2012

Field Trip!


Getting to the track-laying stages of South Woodbury, I figured I would take a field trip, walk along the tracks, and see what was left. The yard is practically gone. The revitalized station remains. The Blasius piano factory was destroyed by fire but the apartments replacing it mirrors its architectural style. It was a trip down memory lane since I used to walk the tracks on my way home from Woodbury High School. More photos can be found at: https://plus.google.com/photos/117979710150548241973/albums#photos/117979710150548241973/albums/5786312270700199073
Woodbury Station refurbished as a restaurant
 
Cooper St looking north to Hunter St bridge
Clock on the station corner
Looking south; Deepwater, Salem branches and the yard veer off to the right; Millville branch to the left
Evergreen Ave underpass
Woodbury Heights
 
 

Sunday, September 16, 2012

Woodbury - South - Part 1

Continued some slow progress on the South Woodbury module. The other modules have had box benchwork (16"x6'). This module required the ability to fade out the Deepwater/DuPont branch and possibly duck it under the mainlines to staging so I went back to L-girder construction with a cookie cutter top (22"x6'). I should have some track laid in about a week. Then we deal with the congestion issue.


Sunday, September 9, 2012

Train Storage

1) I used to store in regular OfficeMax cardboard containers. They held 116 cars (9 rows of 12 MT cars + 8 spacers in the middle). That left a lot of open space above the cars. To facilitate our house move I cut the boxes down to eliminate the headroom as shown.
 
2) Got some cheap (modus operandi) 5 drawer plastic drawer storage units (~$20). Each of the 5 drawers holds78 MT cars (6x13). Extra vertical space will hold locomotive containers also.


3) My next plan is to put storage under my freestanding "Woodbury" modules. My modules are 16" wide and 6' long.  I have about 12" free space between the legs. I will put a 12" board between the horizontal braces with a 1"x3" board mounted vertically down the middle (screwed in making it a strong "L"/"T" girder) which should perfectly hold 288 MT containers (3 high on both sides).


Thursday, September 6, 2012

How to Get Everybody Mad at You:

Model Railroad Forum Thoughts:

Model Railroad forums are a great source of help and information that make the hobby  better. They are a way to acquire new friends with similar interests and grow your skill sets. I believe every modeler should at minimum monitor one site and contribute when they can add something to the group.

A friend led me to the Railwire site (http://www.therailwire.net/forum/index.php?board=1.0) and I became hooked. Then I realized there were other sites. To name a few:
            nScale.net (http://www.nscale.net/forums/forum.php),
            Trainboard (http://www.trainboard.com/grapevine/forumdisplay.php?170-N-Scale),
            nscale.org (http://www.nscale.org/defaulteng.htm)
            Atlas (now defunct)

Personally I definitely object  to people posting the same stuff on multiple forums. They have their own reasons (different friends on each, etc.) but it comes across to me as more ego. (Yes I know I shouldn't judge, please smack me on the hand.) If everyone did that there wouldn't be a reason to have multiple forums.

On several sites I also am annoyed at the excessive use of large emoticons (look at me! look at me!) and the space they take up. But speaking of judging anyway, I have compiled a list of things that I personally like and don't like about each forum. These observations are mostly first impressions and definitely subject to change. (You need to make up your own mind!)


Atlas: Sorry I never got to know you before you closed down. It did have a pervasive reputation of being a site that contained a lot of animated divisive arguments.


nscale.org: I occasionally go to view the layouts. but do not spend much time there.
Pluses:
  • Colorful site
  • Lots of pictures
Negatives:
  • Hard to read
  • Significant foreign model railroads (nothing wrong with that; I just do not have an interest in non-North American railroads)
 
Trainboard:
Pluses:
  • A lot of good experienced modelers across multiple scales
Negatives:
  • Harder to navigate
  • Waste too much space at top with clutter; always have to page down at least once
  • Search feature hard to use and usually times out
  • Admins quick to close topics
 
Railwire:
Pluses:
  • A ton of great modelers (especially the Canadians)
  • Eastern RR tilt (my preference)
  • Easy to get good advice & help (DKS, Conrail 98, Lee Weldon)
  • Well organized site
  • Strong search capability
  • Easy to upload pictures
  • A lot of traffic and interesting topics
  • Seems to have gotten better with the addition of the Atlas fugitives
  • Seems to be the most active (number of topics and participation)
Negatives:
  • Won't accept hotmail email addresses for membership
  • A lot of insider jokes that clog up the discussions
  • People take pride in earning the title "a$$hat" (they could have chosen a less crude title)
  • Very opinionated (a lot of "my way is better")
  • A couple of  socially inept (nasty), picky participants with Neanderthal attitudes.
  • Can be non-family friendly, obnoxious, and proud of it " Irreverence is embraced, instead of frowned upon"
This is an excellent site but this last item is what I consider to be its main drawback. Most people grow up over time but there are some on this site that are proud of their snotty attitudes and very vocal.


nScale.net
Pluses:
  • All N Scale
  • By far the friendliest and most open
  • Family friendly
  • The only forum to stay on topic with my question on forum focuses
  • Easiest to search for local modelers (unfortunately south Jersey is relatively N scale modeler barren)
Negatives:
  • Have yet to uncover many advanced modelers - most seem to have small loop track layouts (certainly OK but I am looking for more)
  • Reputation of feeling everything is OK (critics say they: "celebrate mediocrity")
  • Picture handling OK but could be easier

Personal conclusions:  I am trapped between Railwire and nScale.net. I can get usually get more good advice from Railwire but am turned off by some participants with immature attitudes. nScale.net is more friendly (less Neanderthals). So for the time being I'll enjoy spending time in both and perhaps get to modify some of my initial observations.

Really wishing them all the best! They all make the hobby better.

So go out and find one that meets your tastes!