Sunday, November 3, 2013

November is Inspiration Month - aka MR Open House Month

Grabbed an MR buddy and visited Konrad Richter's layout. After 10 years of labor he opened his doors for "Model Railroad Open House Month" for the first time this year. Beautiful structures, shear rock mountains and some nice track work.

Enjoy the tour:









Monday, October 14, 2013

To Camden and Beyond!

I have moved the construction concentration up the line and wired and ballasted (gray) about 25' of double track mainline through Camden.

Then I cinder ballasted the 2 holding tracks behind the industrial area and the 3 Camden industrial spurs.



I still need to lay the yard leads (waiting for 2 Peco large radius switches to arrive) and then we can begin to plan the connection to the existing Woodbury, Westville, Brooklawn portion of the railroad. The target is to be running the whole railroad by Christmas.

Now that the initial construction end is in sight, I have started attempting to figure out which of my 758 freight cars will realistically make it onto the layout on a regular basis. (I am selling off the excess cars.) That presents 3 main issues:
          1) Number of cars that will fit on the railroad;
          2) Ratio of railroads represented and
          3) Percentages of car types.


1) To calculate/guess at how many cars will fit I figured I would calculate the yard and sidings capacity and figure on a 50% occupancy to not clog up the railroad (it is nearly impossible to switch a yard to make up a train where all the yard tracks are almost full):

123 cars fit in the Camden Pavonia yard
  10 cars in Camden's 2 additional storage tracks
  15 cars Camden (3) industrial spurs
  29 cars fit in the Woodbury yard (where 3 branches join to drop off cars for consolidation (and icing)
  20 cars Woodbury 5 industrial spurs
  20 cars Westville 5 industrial spurs (will increase when I get around to building the Texaco refinery)
-----
217  /  2 = ~ 108 cars

2) Ratio of railroads represented:
The PRSL was a state forced shotgun marriage between the PRR and the RDG which covered the entire South Jersey area. PRR owned 2/3 so they pretty much ran the show for 2 out of 3 years. The PRSL was somewhat strange because it was  a north-south (and east) railroad with no connections on the southern side. CNJ had an interchange mid-point but the main connection with the outside world was Camden to Philadelphia on the north end (some traffic got routed on the PRR north to Trenton and NYC from Camden). I am primarily modeling early 1950s when south Jersey was loaded with farms and Campbell Soup was a major Camden destination (with most reefers being iced/re-iced in the Woodbury yard).

The PRSL supposedly had no freight cars (but did have some cast off hopper cars to hand-load the steam engines and ex-PRR work cars that they re-stenciled "PRSL").

I am guessing I should use:
30% PRR;
15% Reading
5% to each nearby roads: CNJ, B&O, LV, Erie, NYC, C&O, N&W (2 power plants), and FGE (/PFE: need to steal their reefers).
DuPont and Shell also had plants on-line
That leaves about 15% for misc. railroads.

3) Car TYPE ratios. This is tricky since there were 2 power plants fed by the PRSL. Also every town had 1 or 2 coal dealers (remember those octopus coal furnaces in your basement.) Hoppers dominated the up to 100 car trains running through Woodbury so I probably need at least 50% hopper cars.

Multiple refineries were on line. Texaco is in Westville (and Mobil Oil was on the Penns Grove branch). So I am guessing 20 tankers.

20 reefers (remember Campbell Soup and the south Jersey farms.)

South Jersey also had Owens Corning glass plants requiring sand as did the cement mixing businesses trying to keep up with post WWII road construction. Therefore I need about 10-15 gondolas and covered hoppers.

Box cars were everywhere (and a colorful part of the trains) so I figure about 40. That puts me at 140 which is about 30 over estimated capacity so I guess I will slim down and keep the calculated car type ratios. Once I begin operations that should highlight any needs to change the type ratios.

Monday, September 30, 2013

Birthday - Part II

My December 26th, 2012 blog showed what my Floridian son sent me for Christmas. Here is the present he and his family sent me for my birthday.


It masquerades as a letter opener but my Klingon buddies and I know a Bat'leth when we see one.

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Another Birthday!

My birthday last weekend got hi-jacked by a family wedding! (Grrr!) So we had to wait until mid-week for the family birthday pizza party. 3 of my 4 kids and their families were here (the 4th has been deported to Florida). My daughter made me the birthday cake pictured. (Yes, I am a confirmed Pepsi-holic). I asked her why the Junior Mints and got told she didn't want my false teeth to inadvertently get sucked out. (How thoughtful).




Anyway I got money to cover the 2 CNW Dash-8s so I can legally run them now. (Yes I know it is not PRSL 1950s but they look pretty and it's my birthday so I can run anything I want!!!)

I got another 12 feet of double track ballasted. I still have to lay (and ballast) another 2' S curve of double track and then the mainline (not the yard) track of Phase 3 will be completed. Then I have to remove the current window end connections and build a new one (frame and all) to tie together the old and the new mainline runs. That should give me about 85 feet of mostly double tracked mainline.

Sunday, September 15, 2013

What are we trying to achieve here? ... and how far along are we?

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.)
So far the ride has been fun and the railroad is getting better by the day. It may not meet some modelers standards but "Frankly, Scarlet" I don't care!


Monday, September 9, 2013

Schuylkill River / Manayunk Update.

I hate ballasting! (only decaling is worse.) Did the 3 lower and 2 upper tracks on the Schuylkill River / Manayunk module. Only the concrete bridge remains but that will have to wait. I am striving to get the track on the phase 3 construction completed so we can get operations going, so I will now move to the Camden / Pavonia module (more ballasting. Yuk!).

Anyway here's the progress:



Here's the target:

With paper stand-ins:

I have also taken pictures of all my freight cars (765) for 2 purposes.
  • Since my eyesight (and that of my targeted operators) is declining I want to add pictures to the car cards to make it easier to locate the cars when preparing the waybills.
  • Since I have been unemployed, I sell off my excess cars to finance my continuing layout construction. Pictures always help people see what they are getting. I have a For Sale thread opened for the freight cars in the albums I created on nScale.net:


Sunday, August 25, 2013

Plodding Progress II August 25, 2013

Getting there slowly! I can't find my black water based paint so the Schulykill River awaits tinting and the modge podge surfacing. I still need to paint and stripe the road (Schuylkill Expressway) and put in brush and other growth. The Manayunk bridge itself is a loooooong way off.



I did get the 5 Philly style row homes completed. (If I can no longer see it, it doesn't go on (i.e rain downspoults, etc.). (I have already fixed the Bilco doors and put in the missing dormer window..)


BLW was having a close-out sale for the CNW Dash-8s ($20).

Monday, August 12, 2013

Plodding Progress

I am plodding along with my phase 3 construction. I have wired and debugged the lower tracks through the Manayunk/Schulykill River, 30th Street station and Camden scenes. (Pavonia yard is in but not connected to the mainlines). Now I have to construct the higher level return tracks. Above the desk (and computer) I have a 10" wide section that has to handle 7 tracks (3 tracks lower level, 2 tracks upper level and 2 yard leads). I am attempting to hide 3 of the tracks with a bridge (Atlas viaducts) and earth fill between the piers. I have spray painted the viaduct brown and am attempting to match this effect (found near 30th street):



While I am at it, I am assembling some IHC Philly row house kits that I have had sitting around for 40 years. They still need steps, balconies, dormers, and shutters added. The great thing about these old kits is that they have an abundance of extra windows and doors. 


To brighten my day, a friend from Barnegat Light sent me a 1950 PRSL passenger schedule. I was shocked to learn that 13 commuter trains ran through Woodbury daily each way in 1950. (By 1954 they were down to 6 each way.) This was prior to the RDCs coming on board (6 late 1950; 6 more in 1951) so the PRSL used several doodlebugs in addition to the engines (steam and diesel) with Pennsy P70 coaches.

I am trying to make the most of boring through the desk bookshelves and treat them almost like individual scenes or dioramas. The corner one is the Schuylkill (pronounced school'-kill) River / Manayunk bridges scene which gives me my one chance for a decent sized hill/mini-mountain. Some of the hillside faces are almost vertical, but since they can't be seen from the side I should be able to minimize the effect. 

I used cardboard strips and a glue gun to rough in the forms. Then covered them with paper shopping bags.




The green circular wood in front of the lower level tracks is the foundation for the Schuylkill Expressway (know to the locals as the "Sure-Kill Expressway").

Adding some trains gives a better indication of the scenery size.


Made the first batch of sculptamold drier/thicker and slopped that on. Some sagging but everything held in there. I had a friend over to help. That made things interesting as each batch got bigger. Consequently I had a lot of material left over and began doing unplanned sections around the Camden yards and the Philly approach grade.

Now everything was so brown I thought my trains had left New Jersey and were now somewhere in the deserts of the southwest.


Next some more messy work. Scenic glue and grass blends. Try getting it to get it to stick to the steep slopes. 

Finally puff ball trees to give it a forested northeast feel.


Someday I'll get to the river surface and the bridges!

I have also been taking pictures of my freight cars to add to the waybill system and make it easier for the brakemen to ID the car they are looking for. I have taken 407 so far. (Next I need to do the 300+ freight cars I am trying to sell. It is a good thing the camera has lithium batteries!)


Saturday, July 13, 2013

SJNSLWLT#1 (1st annual South Jersey N Scale Lone Wolf Layout Tour)


Three years and three forums later I have finally dug up a few fellow N Scale modelers within driving distance. Today we got together and toured each other's layouts. Although none of us have layouts fit for public display we did get together to share our construction progress, model railroad dreams, and aspirations.

First stop: Bob (Ntrainz1) has switched his 3'x18' layout to code 55 track and is currently waiting for Atlas Manufacturing to get its China manufacturing situation corrected and resupply its track products (code 55 due in November). Bob models the Conrail Shared Access system in southern NJ (without the A frame Paulsboro bridge that dumps Hazmat tank cars into Mantua Creek).



TimHar47 was the next stop. Tim is modeling the PRR Middle Division with a Lehigh Valley interchange.




Next on to John's house and a lesson in how to build a layout without track. While waiting for a slow boat from China (code 80 flextrack) John is laying out the scenery in his 12'z28' layout room (drool, drool!). John is modeling NS in Virginia and Kentucky.



And then back to my place (PRSL early 1950s) where we finally put Mr. Reach Police (epumph - always concerned about being able to reach train wrecks in the far corner) in his rightful place (an access hole near the Camden Pavonia yard).