This 4 track curve is at the end of the second peninsula. The inner and outer tracks are yard and industrial leads. The 2 middle tracks are the mains.
Another 50’, and I will be able to connect up to the existing 500’ loop, making it close to 600’. Then the new section needs to be wired. At that point the lower level will be almost half done.
Absolutely breath taking! I can’t even imagine the time it took planning such a monster layout…then get it to this stage! Well done, Elliot…very well done!
Have you ever been to the HORSESHOE? If not, you would love it! I can sit there for hours and watch. Just west of the shoe, is Galitzen Tunnels. Train watchers heaven
Thanks guys! Was just down there securing some more track.
The room is 38’ x 46’. The plan has changed slightly form the image above, though the flavor is still the same. It is based on the local prototype, so the design didn’t take as much imagination as others put into their layouts. The trick is selecting elements to include, and compressing them to fit. Even with that much space, a lot needs to be compressed.
How much track? I haven’t counted lately. Well over 1000’ secured, but not all powered. I don’t remember the mall total, I think it was on the order of 2000’, most of which was salvaged, along with the switches. What were once masive piles of track and switches, have been substantially reduced. I know I will need to buy more for the upper deck. When complete, it could be over 3000’.
Buck, yes and no on the real Horseshoe Curve. I rode over it on Amtrak going from New York to Chicago, but it was night, so I didn’t get a very good view. I have a cool jigsaw puzzle which has the famous night time flash photo image taken at the 100th anniversary of the curve. The puzzle is a booger, because there are so many dark background pieces.[swg]
Absolutely fabulous !
I don’t know if I could ever work on building a layout of that size, not unless I had a large carpet layout kinda like the Chief. [swg] Sorry Chief, the [}:)] made me do it. [:I]
A roadtrip to Mn will have to be planned some time in the future, but definitely a summer trip, to cold in the winter for this Ca boy.
I am just a mere 6-7 hours away. I can’t add much more than has already been said. It really looks great. I model PRR and have a long grade section that pretends to be the horeshoe curve, but its only one track. From your description you are recycling track and switches from a layout that was once in a mall? You commented that some of the track will not be powered. I am curious about why and where on your layout that would be. Yards perhaps? One more question, what are your largest and smallest diameter curves? Wiring for that trackage might cause a brown out up there, at the very least it might put a strain on my KW. [(-D][(-D] What do you plan to use for power?
Eventually, everything will be powered. Right now there is just one big loop for running. I haven’t installed the switch machines yet. Once I do, the trains will have a lot of places to go.
This board has three, 20 Amp power supplies on it. Each supply feeds 10 blocks of track with a maximum of 6 Amps per block. There is another one just like it under the third peninsula, plus there’s a spare if I really get carried away. I doubt I will need more than 120 Amps @ 18 Volts.
One problem with a 6 Amp limit is, passenger cars are real power hogs. Good thing I don’t have many. Thinking about converting to LED’s. Not high priority.
By the way, the guys who have been around for a while know that “the mall” means Mall Of America.[;)]
They were originally built for the mall layout and had rectifiers because we ran DC to the track. The guy who built the supplies was an electrical engineer. I removed the rectifiers and installed these little gizmos to limit the current. They are called Poly-fuses.
No need to regulate the voltage, my layout is 100% TMCC, no conventional.
Wow, you have built an impressive layout so far Big Boy. What type of landscape for the scenery are you going to use? Hill, plateaus, or mountains. I saw the video on the “mall layout” and was blown away by it. But, how much wood did you use, and how many screws secure all the bench work together on your private layout?
Awesome layout there! I’m no stranger to St Paul either…will have to take a road trip up that way sometime soon (when its warmer of course) to see that layout. Never seen one of that size! Those Big Boy locomotives will look great on that layout. I hope to do something like that myself one day, but I gotta get educated a bit first. Keep us posted!