Monthly Archives: February 2019

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Infrastructure

Building a large-ish model railroad, often necessary projects crop up that I lump under the term “infrastructure”. This is the un-sexy non-model railroad stuff that gets glossed over in the hobby press, and is usually covered in one short sentence in layout articles: “After prepping the basement, construction began on the X,Y & Z Railroad”.

Well.

“Room prep” covers ALOT of ground, and often involves ALOT of grunt labor. But, if the owner wants to have a comfortable, warm, well-lit space to work in, and for visitors to enjoy, that work has to be done.

Sometimes “infrastructure” projects become necessary well after railroad construction has begun. Case-in-point: Our NMRA Division (MCR Division12) had layout tours for members this past November. During the tour, I suddenly realized that many of our members are a bit older, and several have a bit of a “hitch in their giddy-up”, so to speak. This resulted in some difficulty navigating the stairs to the basement, as there was no handrail for about 2/3rds of the way. This was not something that had ever been a problem for the family, but for some visitors it obviously was. Besides, it really was not up to code. Thus, putting in a handrail became top priority before the next op session:

Another order of business was getting Wi-Fi clocks installed around the railroad. The S&NY runs on 1:1 time during op sessions, but the timetable begins at 7:30PM. This was done as most of the early sessions were Saturday evenings, and the crew just used their watches or phones to keep track of the time. The problem was that if there was a glitch that put a halt to ops for a period of time, the timetable and schedule would get out of whack with “real time”. Afternoon sessions were also a problem, in that a totally different timetable had to be used.

Enter Wi-Fi clocks from Model Railroad Control Systems: Wi-Fi Clocks. Finally, a perfect solution! I purchased 3 analog-style clocks, hooked everything up per the instructions, and everything worked perfectly! I put the clocks where at least one clock would be visible from anywhere on the layout. Another “infrastructure” project complete:

As op sessions progressed, it became increasingly apparent that some method had to be devised to allow crews to “OS” (i.e. notify the dispatcher) when they passed a station. I wanted a solution that would be relatively authentic without being cumbersome for the crews, and I hate FRS radios and headsets. Once again, MRCS came to the rescue: Model railroad telephone systems. While not exactly inexpensive, the phone system is easy to use and relatively authentic. Two op sessions has proved the money well-spent. Seth Neumann at MRCS was extremely helpful with advice and instructions on getting the system installed and operational. The downside was several hours spent underneath the layout with a headlamp, pulling CAT-5 cable. Another unglamorous “infrastructure” project complete:

The last project is a minor one, but one that had been bugging me for a while. I used the car-card boxes to hold pencils and uncoupling picks, but the boxes aren’t really deep enough to keep the pencils and picks from flipping out onto the floor. So, over the holidays I picked up a scrap length of PVC pipe and some endcaps from the local hardware store and made pencil and pick holders for all of the station areas. A couple of quick whacks with the chop saw and some hot glue, voila!:


 

Another small “infrastructure” problem checked off.

Again, none of these things were very sexy, but they all add up to benefit operator comfort, safety, and ease of use. So, that’s what I’ve been doing on the railroad for the past 6 months or so. Looking forward to more actual railroad modeling this Spring!

Wordless Wednesday #156

Talky Tuesday #113

This “Talky Tuesday ” will refer all the way back to “Wordless Wednesday #155” of May 02, 2018. How time flies! (Mostly due to family and work obligations.) Hopefully any future hiatus will not be so long. However, my supply of decent unscanned and unpublished S&NY photos is dwindling, so the “Wordless Wednesdays” will definitely be spaced out further, and future posts perforce will tend to be centered on the model S&NY.

Anyway, “WW #155” is a simple shot of #119 at rest in the Towanda engine facility, date unknown.

Book Review: “Model Railroading as Art” by Lance Mindheim

 

Wikipedia: Art is a diverse range of human activities in creating visual, auditory or performing artifacts (artworks), expressing the author’s imaginative, conceptual ideas, or technical skill, intended to be appreciated for their beauty or emotional power.

A friend of mine has the opportunity to visit a lot of layouts, and one N-scale club layout he visited is located in the midst of an artist’s colony of sorts. Interestingly, after public open-houses, the artists usually congregate at the N-scale layout. Why? In their view, the layout is art:

  • It is multi-media.
  • It is 3-dimensional.
  • It is kinetic.
  • It evokes memories and thought.

In my view, the artistic side of model railroading has generally gotten short shrift. In large part, this is likely due to the origins of the hobby being rooted in technical craftsmanship, rather than artistic vision. Also, the hobby tends to attract more left-brain personality types, who in turn prefer more technical/analytical topics that lend themselves to tidy articles in the hobby press.

However, with the increasing numbers of highly-detailed ready-to-run rolling stock on the market (How much detail does a boxcar model need, really?), the incredible extent and variety of scenic materials available, and the creative ferment provided by social media like YouTube, I think the hobby is headed for a major sea-change in direction and outlook towards the artistic becoming co-equal with the technical. Witness the beautiful weathered cars on The Weathering Shop’s webpage, for just one of many examples now “out there”. (www.theweatheringshop.com) The cars shown there are amazing in both the artistic AND technical sense.

Lance Mindheim’s new book, “Model Railroading as Art”, is part of the vanguard of this potential coming change. Mr. Mindheim is already a pioneer in designing small, room-sized, almost minimalist artistic layouts. He also has developed many revolutionary modeling techniques, such as building structures using photographs laminated to basic shells.

“Model Railroading as Art” is ground-breaking in a number of ways, and perversely I think the average model railroader will thereby be disappointed by it for the following reasons:

  • It is not a book filled with pretty pictures of model railroads, a la Kalmbach’s “Great Model Railroads”, though the production values (including the photos) are very good.
  • It is not really a “how-to” book with step-by-step guides on scenery, model photography, or any other technical model railroading subject, though there are many how-to-do-it sidebars throughout.
  • It is not a book trying to sell product, I.E. “Cool scene! Where can I buy that kit?” In fact, the author decries the “more is better” approach to model railroading, and continually emphasizes the use of “negative space” when designing model scenes. I doubt an author telling people NOT to buy so much stuff will find popularity in the mainstream model press, who of course must answer to advertisers, who want to sell MORE stuff.

However, I believe anyone striving to create something more than an “average model railroad” will find it extremely useful.

The book is:

  • A guide to scene composition when placing structures and other scenic elements.
  • A primer on the use of negative space when composing scenes.
  • A guide to the use of light, shadows, and color and how those relate to scene composition.
  • A guide to the selective use of details within model railroad scenes.

In short, Mindheim’s book is a distillation of many concepts of what constitutes “art”, into a format applicable to model railroading. I think it would be especially valuable when planning a new layout, or even a smaller module, and thus I believe it deserves a place in any model railroader’s reference library, right alongside more technically oriented books on track planning, wiring, DCC, etc.