just wondering if anyone here is modeling G-scale indoors as ,I’m slowly building mine in the basement it will be a logging set in the 20 or 30s in northern Ontario and be named lake KoKo railway hopefully one day to get a shay or 4 lol but for now 0-4-0 bachmans we handle all the traffic until i can rebuild my big haulier into something that works
I need to update the pix, but here’s my mighty “empire” (all 5’ x 8’ of it) http://www.catfish-hollow.com./layout.html
Sure! There are lots of us with G indoors.
Here’s my old asylum layout:
1201 pulling through “Table Grove.”
And my old shop layout:
And my current office layout:
(Everything else is piled up in a storage unit now.)
ElMik, that is a really attractive layout! I especially like how you used the trees and buildings as view-blockers. Very nice, indeed!
SandyR
That is a nice layout, but MORE PHOTOS.
I was for a couple years, but I’ve stopped progress on the indoor layout and will be focusing on the outdoor as it will require alot of attention to make it work.
Scooby I have a post or two on the New DNRR under construction, no new pictures yet but should have some next week. My RR has a two track main with a dubl slip switch and 2 bridge duck under (50inch), low point is at 45 inchs and the high point at 60 inchs. I am building without a hard copy track plan since the last three didnt fit. My space is limited to 21X21 ( 168 foot of main line) the two car side of the Garrage. The layout is Reno, I live in northen Ca. so work is progesing slowly. AND TO THE REST OF YOU CLOSET INDOOR LARGE SCALERS, IT’S TIME TO COME OUT. [soapbox]
I have been building an indoor layout under my house for about the last two years. It’s a custom built home on a slope that is steep enough to provide stand-up room under several of the main floor rooms. The house foundation and support walls are spread footing and beam construction so the floor is dirt and still sloped too steeply to work direct so I have framed the layout up to be mostly level but with enough grade differences to allow crossings. There are two 300+ foot lines to allow twin grandsons to run trains independently. The layout traverses 4 “rooms” divided by the foundation support walls so you can generally see only one room well at a time. I have a combination of store-bought and scratch built structures and have done lots of “landscaping” and topography modeling learned from several years of working in N-scale some time back. My two lines aren’t modeled after any existing lines or any specific era and have kill sidings to store a variety of trains. They are designed to just “run-for fun” and not to do a lot of switching or “freight on a schedule” operations. My real joy is actually in the dreaming and building.
I would be happy to supply some pictures but I see that a note from “Bergie” on 11/27/06 indicates Mac users photos will not work at present and that’s what I use. If someone with a Mac has found a way to provide photos and can clue me in I can get started. In the meantime, count me in as another “indoor” modeler.
try putting your pics on webshots.com then from there to here thats how i do it
Here some photos - assuming I did everything correctly. It seems a little complicated.
On the layout schematic, the gray color represents foundation walls, the red and green two different railway lines, yellow for sidings, and the blue is an extension of the red line. I tried to screen out most of the overhead ductwork in the pictures. The gray backgrounds are cloth to hide the wall framing and the one long painting (40 feet) partly showing behind the turntable was done for me by a friend for a previous N-scale layout and salvaged for this layout. I don’t have much talent for painting decent clouds or mountains so the backgrounds are mostly just pale gray/blue.
The turntable is the most recent addition. It’s scratchbuilt using a lazy susan base and works surprisingly well considering the total cost (not including track) was under $100.00. It’s not motorized, of course, for that cost.
Nice pix what is the size of the differante areas ? and can you post a larger shot of your turntable? I plan on adding one but I have not decided on a type yet. How’s floor holding up with all the rain this year?
Thats a nice layout Tom[:D]
Here is a shot of my “G” Gauge double track around my Front Room.
I can run it any time I want. I especially like it during commercials.
Sorry for the poor quality. I have one of those digital cameras that knows everything on how to take a perfect picture.
to dwbeckett: I’m sorry the photos aren’t a bit larger. I’m just learning how to process them. I tried saving them in higher resolution (image size) and placed 2 new ones on my photo holding site but subsequest test revealed they were going to display no larger here than the first set. The photo site has their own size standards they adjust to and it doesn’t look like that can be changed. I’d like to know how others are able to display larger photos here.
For your area size question - you’ll notice the layout is kind of a “U” looking format so I’ll start from left upper to across the bottom and then upper right to give sizes. We had a fair amount of rain last year and are getting plenty this week. I monitor the dirt floor but have not noticed any water intrusion. I have wood “runways” or decks in some areas and indoor/outdoor carpet in others to keep from tracking dirt into the house.
Upper left is 28’ x 16’ but I can only use about half of the long dimension because I run out of headroom. Across the bottom is 20" x 16", 20’ x 15’, 20’ x 4’ (that’s a stairway framing zone), 20’ x 13’ (only used about half because the height above the floor is pretty tall), and the upper right room is 18’ x 16’. The smallest diameter curve on the green line is 8’ and the smallest on the red line is 5’.
Since I don’t seem to be able (for now anyway) to post a larger picture of the turntable perhaps if you have specific questions about it?..
Thanks for the extra info. looking forward to the next Reno trip(03/01) to see how much snow we have in the yards. [:D]
TOM THE BRAT,Can’t beleve a computer programmer forgot there logon TRY TORBY your signature gave it away
David
Of course, I knew my login, but the password got reset again and again and they only will mail it to the email address I used to have…
So, here I am with a more descriptive name[:-,]
I am modeling G scale (1:20.3 - 1:22.5) indoors. I’m modeling a freelance backwoods logging line on 45mm track and a small mining/industrial line on 16.5mm (HO) track around the perimeter of my very small San francisco apartment. Although I model from a model railroader’s point of view and am a stickler for details, I feel if it looks good it’s OK. I used to model in On30 but I caught the Large Scale bug when I built a logging caboose and some flatcars in Large Scale that I originally built in On30. It is so relaxing and enjoyable to model in LS compared to O or HO and at least you can see the details without a microscope.
Hehe. I agree with you there. My eyeballs aren’t 8-years-old any more[sigh]