BurlingtonNorthern
New Member
Ships for your layout...
I think you have some really neat ideas for your layout, especially the one about setting it in late winter (especially if you’re going to include some patches on snow on the ground). I personally have wanted to construct a snowbound layout/module set along one of BN’s former Great Northern routes through the High Sierras (unfortunately, I’m just able to build modules at the moment and everyone else’s is set in late spring/early summer).
If you want to include any boats, tugs or barges in the river around your mining operation or near your port city, allow me to recommend Deerfield River Laser. I don’t know why but they don’t seem to be mentioning their HO products on their website.
http://www.deerfieldriverlaser.com/index.html
I know that they have HO products however because my brother recently purchased an HO barge with S-scale parts-and is currently using it to make a very small “S”-scale river barge.
I saw Deerfield’s products at their recent show in Connecticut. and must say that I was impressed with the quality of his models.
Hope this helps.
Tyler.
I think you have some really neat ideas for your layout, especially the one about setting it in late winter (especially if you’re going to include some patches on snow on the ground). I personally have wanted to construct a snowbound layout/module set along one of BN’s former Great Northern routes through the High Sierras (unfortunately, I’m just able to build modules at the moment and everyone else’s is set in late spring/early summer).
If you want to include any boats, tugs or barges in the river around your mining operation or near your port city, allow me to recommend Deerfield River Laser. I don’t know why but they don’t seem to be mentioning their HO products on their website.
http://www.deerfieldriverlaser.com/index.html
I know that they have HO products however because my brother recently purchased an HO barge with S-scale parts-and is currently using it to make a very small “S”-scale river barge.
I saw Deerfield’s products at their recent show in Connecticut. and must say that I was impressed with the quality of his models.
Hope this helps.
Tyler.
Hello to all. I have decided that for my first true layout, I would do a coal open-pit coal mine and port city. The coal mine would supply coal to the ships in the harbor. As this is a fictional section of th B&O during it's later years, it will be pulling around mail, tools and equipment for mining, the miners themselves, and the coal mined by the miners. I wanted some tips as to how to go about doing this. Any suggestions are welcomed with open arms. Following this text, but still in the same post, will be a copy of my typed and finallized plan. As I do not have money set aside for my track yet, though I have already ordered some, I have decided that I will be using an oval of track where one end is the coal mine (which will be in a valley alongside a river), one end is going to be the port and a few ships. The rest in between the two is going to be all forest. The river's mouth will dump into the chesapeake bay, which flows into the atlantic.
Here is the typed track plan:
Track Specifications:Code 100 Atlas Sectional Track
Era: 1980
Season: Late winter/Early Spring (when the snow is starting to melt)
Theme: Worker Commuting, coal mining.
Geography: Port-Small Valley filled with coal
Running Lines: B&O
Action Plan: A Baltimore & Ohio train of coal hoppers will arrive at the valley, passing through a narrow mountain pass blasted from the rock. When it arrives and places each of it’s 5 cars over the coal trestle, it will load them and drop off any tools or equipment ordered by the miners. It will also bring the mail for any miners staying on the mine grounds. It will then proceed to picking up any mail to return with and any broken tools or equipment requests. After arrival at the port, the coal will be unloaded and taken to the docks where it will be but onto the ships to use as a fuel source. After picking up any new mail, delivering mail from the mine, and after picking up all of the tools, repaired and new together, along with the equipment, then it will then loop around and repeat the process.