Snowy Soo

Winter Railroading.

Saturday 2 December 2017

Tuesday 3 October 2017


A Layout I like: Esteban Martinez's BNSF Transcon




It's been a while and I've got some news, which I'll reveal in a while. In the meantime enjoy this layout tour. 


Sunday 26 March 2017

CP en route to Versapet


Caught this short train on the Obico sub on its way to switch out hoppers at Versa pet (makers of kitty litter apparently). 


Friday 11 November 2016

Cool video/layout: Port of Los Angeles in HO scale

I won't bother with a long description here, instead I'll let this great video speak for itself.

I'm adding it as a link to my list of favourite modern, room-sized layouts (listed down the right side of my blog landing page).

Enjoy


Saturday 24 September 2016

Playing around with container images


Greetings everyone,

They say slow progress is better than no progress, so I'll take some heart in that. 

I am getting some modelling done this weekend, focusing on what I see as the two most urgent and glaring problems my layout has right now: 


  1. Too much bare blue-sky backdrop badly in need of photographic images to give the layout some depth.
  2. Still too much pink insulation board showing. I mean ... it's been three years. You'd think by now I would have put some paint and ground cover over the bare spots (and yet they're still there). 
So it's these two things I'm trying to focus on this weekend. 

I decided to do something with what looks like a vacant lot between two industries: the warehouse (which I think I'm going to call Queensway Transfer), and Hymopak. 


Here's the spot on the layout, empty and adorned by only my four pathetic shipping containers:


Those four containers look lonely against the backdrop. But at $10 a piece now, filling the space with more would cost more then I'm willing to pay.

On the prototype, across Medulla Road from Hymopak, there's a large industry that sells, rents and fixes shipping containers. I'm guessing the business is there due to its proximity to Obico container terminal, which CP shuttered a few years ago. 



This shot shows the industry I'm modelling. I like the multi-coloured stacks of shipping containers. 
The place always has stacks of containers, in a multi-coloured mosaic that I think would make an interesting addition to my layout, while sticking to the prototype and not using a lot of space.

Now, I could just model it using HO scale plastic shipping containers, but they're surprisingly expensive. Even when bought in packs, they're in the range of $40 for three, which seems like a lot. I mean, they're just plastic boxes!


I've managed to pick up a few cheap containers (four in total) at train hows. But it's not enough to create the kind of mass I need for this spot. So, I decided to try something that's quick and almost free: printing digital photos of real containers, printing them out to size and combining them to form a background image. 

There was an article about this in one of my older Model Railroader magazines that I now can't locate. 

One challenge is that I no longer have layout programs or Photoshop on my computer. Those are expensive too (I know what you're thinking and you're right, I am cheap). I know they're are free photo editing and layout programs out there, but I wanted to know if I could get useable images uploading photo files and placing them in a Google doc (simple). 


So I went to work this morning. The hardest part was finding images of containers shot directly from the side, and not off on an angle. I uploaded them onto the Google doc, moved and cropped the rectangular container images until they looked like stacks and printed them out on photo paper. 


You can see the results here. Sorry this pic is so blurry. 



Camera shake made this photo come out blurry. Images of the actual containers are fairly sharp.
So I trimmed the containers and stuck them to the backdrop using double-sided tape. 

You can see the results here: 

The images don't look bad. But I think the effect would be much better in 3D, which will be more work.





Here's a wider view. 

So how well did this work?

Well, I'm glad I to know I can use Google Docs to contain the images for printing. Though its function is very limited for layout tasks, I was able to crop and stack the containers. This is a good thing to know. 

I'm happy with the image quality but I'm convinced the containers need to be "built out" and made 3D, not pressed flat against the backdrop. I think I'm going to go back and do this here, but it's going to be more work. I could photo laminate the images onto a wood or styrene blocks. Then of course, I would need shots of a few container ends, which means another hunting expedition on Google images. 

I still think that for now, the containers add a bit of visual interest to what was a barren section of the layout. This is going to be one of those situations where it will have to be "good enough for now" until I can circle back and maybe improve the scene when I have more time. 

A chain link fence, maybe a small utility building and some scenery to blend the images in would help the scene out a lot. 

I once saw at a train show very cool N scale module of a large shipping container facility. The man who build it combined dozens of images like the ones below to create a convincing scene along the backdrop. He also had scores of actual shipping container models stacked between the loading tracks, which really helped give the scene the scale it needed. 

I'd be interested to hear your comments.


Also, if anyone out there is interested in trying something like this on their layout, I've included some downloadable image files below. You will need to re-size them. I'm no expert in posting downloads. 















Thursday 28 July 2016

Very cool: Lego gears for a modern roll-up door

No, I've not died or given up the hobby.

With a full-time job and two young children, my modelling comes in fits and starts ...  with long gaps in between, which is fine.

I have been working on the layout and plan to post an update this weekend. In the meantime, I thought I'd share this cool idea I spotted on Thomas Klimoski's excellent Georgia Northeastern layout.

On his layout, there's a modern building with a roll-up door that allows freight cars to be delivered inside. The difference is, he's got a door you can roll up by twisting a knob disguised as a roofing vent.

Best of all: it uses gears from a Lego Techniques set to drive the door mechanism. Very clever. A Model Railroader how-to article waiting to be written.

Check it out:




Thomas's layout is my favourite kind to check out: a room-sided modern-era layout that features industrial switching.

Here's an embed of a video tour of his layout.

Enjoy this and be sure to check out the rest of his videos.



Friday 26 February 2016

If you're needing inspiration....



The layout featured in the YouTube embed above is Per Laursen's amazing "UP/BNSF in Texas layout."

This is a complete video overview of his layout, but he's also posted some more video embeds, photos and general information about the railroad on his website here. The track plan is here.

He also runs his own company supplying modern model railroad structures. If you need a Denny's or Lowe's store on your layout, Per just might be your guy. The website for his company Summit Customcuts is here.

With its modern equipment and simple track plan, Laursen's modelling reminds me right away of Pelle Soeborg, a contributing editor of Model Railroader whose well-known work you can see here.  Apparently, these two Danes are friends.

His layout is 44'x28' with loads of staging, cameras to monitor the hidden tracks, automated electronics, etc., etc. The layout presentation is also exceptional (lighting, backdrop, panels ... all first rate)

Many modellers would run into some serious limitations trying to create a layout like this: space, time, money, skill ... or in my case, all four.

And though I'll certainly never build a layout like this I find it a source of inspiration to look at layouts of this quality.

Modern buildings and outstanding layout presentation are hallmarks of Per Laursen's modern-day layout set in Texas. (Photo: Per Laursen/www.summit-customcuts.com)