I
have been babbling along in this blog for more than 2 years now, so it is
probably time to pause and review the construction philosophy
We
almost managed to keep the 19" minimum radius intact (on the Camden
turnback inner track we had to go 18").
- It is still a code 80 rail layout (which one friend said was like scraping fingernails across a blackboard). Code 55 is in vogue now but I am not about to spend a ton of money replacing 40 years worth of track and turnouts (~ 50) for something my eyes will basically miss anyway. [Some folks have not learned/will never learn how to allow other people to enjoy the hobby without imposing their value standards on them.]
- We have faithfully represented the 1950 trackage arrangement through Westville & Woodbury. [Done]
- Created a few Philly area scenes to give a sense of what was there (not enough space to duplicate). [Working on it]
- Created Camden Pavonia yard (in name only, to support the railroad operations). [Working on it]
- Level of detail: As I said in the July 15, 2011 blog entry: "It is not my intent to model a super detailed layout so the nit-pickers should have a field day. I will model to a “good enough” level and enjoy the return to my childhood memories."
Long
range goals:
·
Enjoy
operations with a few friends and aim to run an entire 1950s schedule of PRSL passenger
and freight trains with some sort of freight forwarding card system.
·
Write
a 3rd article to be published, this time including a brief the history of the
Pennsylvania-Reading Seashore lines.
Short
range goals:
·
Get the phase 3
construction done (before Christmas) to the point where I can tie its track
into the current operating portion of the railroad.
·
Get
minimal scenery onto the phase 3 construction areas
Mid
range goals:
·
Upgrade
all scenery
·
Get
someone to build some custom signature structures:
o
Woodbury
station
o
Manayunk
Schuylkill River concrete bridges
o
St.
Pat's church
o
Buzby
Bros. cement
·
Find
a way to include the Texaco refinery in the Westville modules.
I
am officially a senior citizen (actually a 13 year old kid trapped in a 60s
body) and have already been blessed with the opportunity to build some model
railroads that were fictitious (sorta prototypical) and gave me a free reign to
do what I wanted (see: http://www.myrrlayout.com/R/Aspfiles/DetailPage.asp?Xfer_Code=20001280) but I always
knew that, before I kicked the bucket, I would be drawn back to model the local
railroad (PRSL) that ran within a block of my house in both towns I grew up in
and my high school. This gives me the joy of reliving some of those youthful
experiences.
There
are downsides to this endeavor:
- South Jersey is flat, flat, flat (and I love mountain railroading).
- The PRSL in the 1950s used ugly black Baldwin road switchers (not even a racing stripe).
- Steam was primarily PRR 4-4-2s and PRR H6,7,8 2-8-0s. (These models currently don't exist.)
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