No. 62: Portage Tower Project

I offered to build a model of Portage Tower for my friend Mike Moore, who is having a layout built for him in his home in Albert Lea, Minnesota.  Clark Propst and Bob Gretillat are doing the heavy work.  I’m just helping out with some of the fun part. You may recall that Portage Tower was made popular some time ago by MR editor Jeff Wilson, who wrote an article on the junction and tower in the 1999 edition of Model Railroad Planning.  So when I heard Clark mention that Mike wanted to model Portage Tower on his new layout, … Continue reading No. 62: Portage Tower Project

No. 61: Ackley Clean Up and a New Project

I’ve been working on the Ackley, Iowa layout for 14 months straight since I began construction on 4th of July, 2016.  Meanwhile a whole lot of freight car projects have been stacking up and there are a lot of models in need of repair and upgrade, so I have decided to take the next 60 days (all of September and October) to complete rolling stock projects. Cleaning Up The first thing I did was clean up the layout so it would be presentable.  I had been doing a lot of scenery work and the room and the layout were trashed.  … Continue reading No. 61: Ackley Clean Up and a New Project

No. 60: Modeling the Marshall Canning Company of Ackley, Iowa, Part 1

The last time I touched the Marshall Canning building on my M&StL Ackley, Iowa layout it looked like this. As of today the model is about 99% complete. Here’s what I was able to get done in the last couple of weeks. Adding Mortar With the model painted I wanted to try adding mortar between the bricks. I used the industry standard, Roberts Brick Formula, seen below, for the job. I never used this stuff before but it was quick and easy and I highly, highly recommend it. I followed the instructions exactly and brushed the stuff on with a … Continue reading No. 60: Modeling the Marshall Canning Company of Ackley, Iowa, Part 1

No. 59: Ackley Depot Scenery, Part 0

Last Friday my wife dragged me out to the “Technikmuseum Sinsheim” (in English, the Technical Museum at Sinsheim, Germany).  My wife was excited to take my son and me there but honestly I expected another slow day at another museum. It turned out I was very, very wrong.  It was like going to the German version of the Smithsonian Air & Space Museum.  It was fantastic. The museum was full of tanks and military vehicles of all types, along with an entire warehouse full of cars and motorcycles and F1 cars, plus a warehouse of tractors, airplanes, bikes, ship engines, … Continue reading No. 59: Ackley Depot Scenery, Part 0

No. 58: South Side Scenery (Ackley Layout)

Around the time I went to St. Louis last month for St. Louis RPM, I made a lot of progress on a bunch of small things.  On the south side module I painted track and ties, did some ballasting, put down some dirt to prep for scenery, and finished the fascia behind the workbench.  Here are a few progress photos. Painting Track I had a lot of unpainted track on the end of the south-side module and I painted all the track and got it ready for ballasting.  I used the same paint I always used for track–Testors Rubber.  The … Continue reading No. 58: South Side Scenery (Ackley Layout)

No. 57: Repairing Scenery on the Ackley Layout

We drove to Strasbourg, France over the weekend and it was a really beautiful city.  It’s France, so there were plenty of peddlers, con-men and homeless people about, but in general the city was surprisingly nice and it has a large post-medieval-era center that is beautifully restored.  Outdoor restaurants were everywhere.  We enjoyed our day shopping and seeing the sights.  Here’s me and The Boss in “Petite France” on the island downtown in Strasbourg. The Catholic cathedral downtown is spectacular.  A sign outside said it took 400 years to complete.  Being a layout builder, naturally the first thing out of … Continue reading No. 57: Repairing Scenery on the Ackley Layout

No. 56: The Woodward & Tiernan Printing Company

I am a small-layout fanatic and am always planning small and micro-layouts in my head.  It’s a curse.  The other day I went to a doctor appointment in town and spent 20 minutes planning a switching layout on the coffee table in the waiting room.   As I write this I’m looking at my dining room table…thinking that if I used Code 55 15-inch radius on one end I could get a two-sided switching layout on this thing and… I like the idea of small layouts that can support an operations session of about 30-45 minutes, such as the “RPM … Continue reading No. 56: The Woodward & Tiernan Printing Company

No. 55: Lighting the Ackley Layout

The day before I left Germany for St. Louis RPM I drove south about 45 minutes and went to the West Wall Museum in Pirmasens, Germany.  The West Wall was Germany’s post-WWI reply to the Maginot Line, and it was vast and extensive.  The museum is essentially the only remaining tunnel system from the West Wall (most of it was demolished after the war) and it includes all kinds of memorabilia and equipment, and a large number of vehicles, and a lot of outstanding 1-to-35 scale models of the former facilities. Here are a couple of pictures if you’re interested.  This 1-35th model … Continue reading No. 55: Lighting the Ackley Layout

No. 54: St. Louis RPM, 2017, Part 2

Here are some model photos from the 2017 St. Louis RPM Meet last week.  More complete coverage of models is being assembled on our new Flickr site at https://www.flickr.com/photos/35369592@N06/albums. Our official photographer mark Lewis also took a lot of photos and I’ll get them soon and post a Part 3.  The photos below are models that I liked. First, a few photos of the model tables.  We had 56 eight-foot tables set aside for models and they were almost full. I take a lot of crap from people about not extending the tables up to eye-level.  We resist that, believing that … Continue reading No. 54: St. Louis RPM, 2017, Part 2

No. 53: St. Louis RPM, 2017, Part 1

The 2017 St. Louis RPM Meet was held on Friday, June 23rd and Saturday, June 24th 2017 at the Gateway Convention Center in Collinsville, Illinois…and it was a blast! Above.  An overview of the room on Friday morning.  by Friday evening we already had 445 in attendance. I traveled back to the US on the Sunday before the meet and spent the week seeing friends, doing some railfanning, and prepping for the meet.  It was a good week but it went fast.  The evens started on Thursday evening when we had our usual “social” at Bandana’s BBQ–which about 80-85 guys … Continue reading No. 53: St. Louis RPM, 2017, Part 1