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As of yet, the layout is in the planning stage. Nothing is carved in stone - not even sandstone. And I kept doing research (that is, I bought magazines and books), some of which led me to make minor and subtle changes to the design.
Then - I came up with the idea of using a mountain (it would have to be pretty steep on both sides) as a divider between the back and the front, serving much the same function as a backdrop down the middle of a layout, which is to provide separation between the two sides. Some more rearrangement, and I wound up with this:
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| Overhead |
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| Front view |
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| Back view |
After listening to discussion about TOMA (The One Module Approach) on the Modeler's Life Podcast, I decided on a change in direction. Why limit myself to one door? I could go bigger and smaller at the same time. So I looked for plastic storage containers that I could use to put sections in, and I found some reasonably priced flats that with internal dimensions to hold 36" long x 24" wide x 12" high. I could do a point-to-point railway with those dimensions - and have reasonably tall mountains (oh, let's face it - truncated hills) also.
So I started modularizing:
- Coal mine
- Rail yard
- Industrial area
- Town
- Power plant
So I essentially unfolded what had been wrapped around the east (right) side of the layout, and rearranged a little.
Each section would be 36" wide and 18" deep, for a total length of 15 feet.
Going from left (west) to right (east), I wound up with:
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| Coal Mine |
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| Yard |
Yep - the turntable is back.
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| Industry |
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| Town |
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| Power Plant |
I'd use the sections of mainline on either end to do a little bit of staging. I could even add another section on each end to provide actual staging and a loop for continuous operation like this:
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| West loop (right loop identical but mirrored) |
I also decided to use the same "footprint" for the mountain cross-section on either end of each module, allowing me to rearrange the sections any way I would like to, or even to add additional modules in between.
And all five of the basic sections (excluding the optional end loops) could be cut from one piece of light plywood.
I went to Lowes and had the sections cut. Finally and officially, construction had begun.










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