This will be a short post. We got a new dog from the shelter that has Kennel cough and has developed an attachment to me. She gets anxious if I am out of sight, so I have had to spend quite a lot of time taking care of her this past month. I was able to take the base boards for the midpoint town and work on them with her near me. I glued the cork roadbed in place and spiked the track in place. Hopefully she will get better and join the other dogs which should reduce her anxiety.
Tuesday, December 6, 2022
Wednesday, November 2, 2022
October Construction
Wiring is progressing. I have connected all the feeders to the buss for the staging tracks and two lift outs. control panels for the lift out turnouts and junction are being wired and a 12-volt power supply for them is being ordered. Five of the switch tenders from Micro Mark have been installed. 18 feet of flex track have been laid from the junction up the grade to the second town and 12 feet of flex track on the top loop have also been installed. Feeder wires for them are also in place. Also, the rest of the track for the junction has been installed.
Installing the switch tenders for the left outs was easy, but I will have to go under the layout to install all those for the junction area. The image below has the track that is installed for the junction half highlighted.
Saturday, October 1, 2022
September Construction
Laying track, but it is taking much longer than I hoped. I am using track nails and have to drill a hole in every fourth tie of the flex track. This is about one every inch. The staging tracks total a bit over 55 feet or 660 nail holes to drill in the flex track. I am using a #61 drill bit and bought a tube of ten of them in case they break, being very thin. I got all the track for the Southern Pacific main line in place and am drilling holes an inserting nails as fast as I can.
I then need to connect the feeder wires to the main buss line and install the switch tenders. A power line will need to be run to the triple pole - double throw switches that will cause the points to move and provide power to the turnout points.
The attached track plan shows the track that has been laid, except for the staging, in orange. This will be divided into two power blocks with the lift-outs and staging tracks being one and the junction and yard the other. The track leading to the end of the line town and the third lift out at the other end of the town will be part of a third power block. The midpoint town and upper loop will be a fourth power block. I am using disconnects for the buss lines between lift outs and the other parts of the layout.
After I test the SP main and staging, I will then add the rest of the tracks at the junction. Followed by the grade up to the second town, the lift out leading to it, and then the tracks for the midpoint town. This is on two eight-foot-long sections that I will secure in place after the track is laid.
The final phase of track laying will include the lift out from the midpoint town to the upper loop, the upper loop, the lift out from the upper loop to the end point town, and the tracks for that town.
Thursday, September 1, 2022
August Construction
Construction is proceeding slower than I hoped. Except for the yard area I have glued down roadbed on almost the entire junction half of the layout. I also found a few more code 70 #4 turnouts. This has allowed me to make a few revisions to the plan for the yard area. Revised plan and photos below.
For September I hope to have the staging loop track installed, wired, tested, and running. I purchased some constant on switch motors from Micro-Mark. Sweep sticks from FastTracks were also purchased to help with the track laying. Track for the yard area will be placed loose so that I can make any adjustments needed for buildings.

Sunday, July 31, 2022
July Construction
Friday, July 1, 2022
June Construction
I only got part way through what I was planning to accomplish in June. There were too many other things to take care of the last part of the month. I did complete the backdrops and most of the sub roadbed. The benchwork sections are bolted together.
I found that I will need to cut out at least two more 30-inch radius quarter sections and maybe a third. These will be for the town at the end of the line and/or where the track will pass over the interchange line as it goes to the mid-point town. I will also need to cut risers for the highest loop.
I have also been experimenting with different arrangements of the yard and engine service facilities tracks. The engine house and service facilities will be moving to the left end of the yard. this will help protect the buildings.
The lift-out sections between the two halves of the railroad use door hinges to hold them in place and keep the tracks aligned. Only one hinge for each end of the lift-outs is needed.
Some photos of the bench work and sub roadbed. Also, the latest track plan.
Revised yard area
The engine house (outlined building and sand house and fuel dock have been moved to the left end of the yard. The caboose track is now at the front. The team track has also been moved to the left of the new station location.
Sunday, May 29, 2022
May Construction
I am posting this a couple of days early. The benchwork is almost completed. Roadbed is being laid for the staging tracks and the buss wire for it has also been run. Hardboard for the backdrop has been installed on the east side of the layout. I had to install the right half in two parts to get it to curve around the part of the wall that sticks out two inches. The picture of the west side of the layout was taken mid-May. All the lumber and other items on top of the benchwork are being stored there temporarily.
Goals for June are to first get the staging tracks wired and operating. Then place the sub-roadbed on the west half of the layout for the staging loop and interchange area. This will be followed by roadbed, track and wiring for the complete staging loop including the two lift-outs at each end. If all goes well, I hope to have the staging loop in operation by the end of June.
I have also made some minor alterations to the track plan after learning a new trick using cornu curves in place of flex track in XTrackCAD. XTrackCAD has a function button that allows you to add cars and locomotives and run trains around the layout. The red lines in the picture below indicate the direction the turnouts are set to. I put some cars and a pair of locomotives on the tracks and ran them around to check siding lengths.
The program also measures the distance a train moves and I used that to find the distance from the start of the siding at the top left to the end of the track on the bottom half of the layout and then to the starting point. Running point-to-point the mainline is 91.5 feet. Including the continuous run section increases the total length to just over 100 feet. Operations will be point-to-point with a turntable at the right end of the final town and a wye at the junction for turning locomotives. The continuous run is there if I feel like just running some of the larger locomotives over the entire layout.
Motive power for the Modoc and Lassen will be a pair of 2-6-6-2T's and a 2-10-2T for the 1950's and three RSD-15's for the 1960's. Actual start and end dates are 1953 when the Southern Pacific transferred the AC-9's to the Modoc Line and 1969 when ALCO stopped building diesel locomotives in the US.
I was also able to purchase a couple of locomotives on EBay this month. The one on the left is a Mantua 2-6-6--2T full saddle tank logger. It was listed as broken with a buy price of several dollars over $100. The seller mentioned that it might be DCC equipped as it only hummed when he tried it on his DC track. When it arrived, I put it on the test track and found it is DCC equipped with sound, etc. The decoder is a TCS WOW sound unit. I have to find out how to add a keep alive to it.
The locomotive on the right is a NWSL full saddle tank logger that was listed on EBay shortly after the Mantua engine arrived. It is in very good condition with added lights and crew. I almost got it for a very low price but ended up paying almost the minimum price on the BrassTrains site due to a last second bid. Fortunately, I had posted a higher total for my bid and did not lose out.
The Mantua locomotive was undecorated while the NWSL was decaled for a fictional road. I removed the decals using MicroSet and MicroSol and rubbing them with a cotton swab. They came off after several minutes of rubbing. I then decaled both for the Modoc and Lassen. The NWSL already had the number 8 and I numbered the Mantua as 6.
Both are supposed to represent the same engine. As can be seen the Mantua is much larger and has several inaccuracies such as both air reservoirs at the front of the saddle tank. On the prototype locomotive one is toward the rear. The drivers are 55 inches in diameter compared the 44 inches of the prototype. Since it is only intended as a spare engine for running at the club and to use while a decoder, keep alive, and speaker to the other , that is okay.
Sunday, May 1, 2022
April Construction Update
The following photo shows the front half of the east wall framing. Each framing section is three feet wide by eight feet long. The two sections will be bolted together with carriage bolts. The legs are attached with carriage bolts. The support pieces are held in place by 1.25-inch wood screws. I had originally intended for the legs to be removeable but had to permanently attach them due to needing them supporting the upper level of the track.
I have also drawn the curved plywood sub-roadbed pieces to be cut out of the remaining sheet of plywood. These can be seen in the second photo. These will probably take a day to cut out with the jig saw. These are 30-inch radius quarter circles. Most of these will be for the loop area on the northeast end of the layout (see track plan) along with connecting the upper-level town on the east side to the loops.
I also need to go to the hardware store for more 1.25-inch wood screws and 1x3 inch lumber for support pieces. I will also check to see if the store has any cans of mistake paint that is close to sky blue. Every once in a while, when they are mixing paint, they will make a mistake and end having to make a second can of the correct color mix. The mistakes are usually a lot less expensive than buying a can.
I have levelled the front section of framing to match the rear section when it is level again. The floor has about a two percent slope from the rear of the garage to the front.
May construction plans are to finish the framing for the west wall, lay roadbed and track for the staging yard and maybe complete the lower-level loop connecting the two ends of the staging yard to the rest of the layout. Then wiring the track so I can run a train or two. The staging tracks are about 18 feet long and will hold two normal sized trains each.
Monday, April 11, 2022
More ALCO's
I finished decaling the three RSD-15's for the Modoc and Lassen. They were bought/leased from the Saint Louis Southwestern through the Southern Pacific. Only the name was painted out and replaced with the road numbers remaining the same. The lettering on the middle locomotive is okay. I will have to use some Micro Sol to remove the air bubble that makes it look wrong.
Saturday, April 2, 2022
ALCO's
I was able to obtain several RSD-15s at a good price. Three of them will be lettered for the Modoc and Lassen, two will remain as Southern Pacific, and two are being repainted and lettered for the Gorre and Daphetid.
I know John Allen disliked diesels, but his railroad was set in the first half of the 20th century. Mine is set in the 1950's to the early 1970's. Economics was the driving force in railroads dieselizing. As such, the Gorre and Daphetid would have also done so if reluctantly.
In addition to the two RSD-15s I have also painted and lettered an ALCO Century 636 for the Gorre and Daphetid. Except for one steam locomotive that appeared on the G&D roster for a brief time all of them were numbered lower than 100. For the diesels I have started with 100 and gone up to 132 for a fictitious roster including other RS and RSD locomotives along with other century series engines. Below are two photos of the C636 and one of the RSD-15's as painted for the Gorre and Daphetid. The other RSD-15 is numbered 106.
Tee Shirt
I decided to make a custom tee shirt design for the railroad. Allied Shirts was the company I chose. Their site offers a variety of clothes that can be customized with the design you choose. I located pictures of the three ho scale steam locomotives that would be used for the railroad.
Using Paint Shop Pro I replaced the background with a color that was as close as I could make it to the color I decided to use for the shirt. The three modified images are below. When I decal the locomotives I will may change #108 to just #8. The image of #5 is to the same scale as the two mallets though I enlarged it to match the width of the other two on the shirt The tee shirt with the added images is below them.
#5 is from the Sugar Pine Lumber company and got the nickname of Minaret for the mountains near the lumber road. #108 was originally a coal burner that was built for the Potlach lumber company as #24. This resulted in two of the air reservoir tanks being mounted on the top of the water tank. It was later converted to oil and transferred to Weyerhauser. The tank mounted reservoirs were removed. It is still in service today on the Black Hills tourist road. #4 was originally built for the Clover Valley Lumber company and later went to the Feather River Lumber Company. It is also still in service as a tourist locomotive and has been on the Niles Canyon Railway.
The #5 is in the book "Rails to the Minarets". #4 and #108 and their Baldwin sisters are covered in the book "Timber Titans"
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