
PAGE 17 - SEPTEMBER 2003, ©2003
Carl Arendt
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WORKIN' ON THE RAILROAD

Jeff Hartmann, from Long Beach,
California, made this tiny HO diorama to perch above the whiteboard in his office
cubicle. It depicts a small town station named "Yensid" circa 1900. It
was built on a 1"x4" plank, three feet long. In addition to the station,
there's a spur to a brick warehouse. Jeff also penned the drawing covering the whiteboard,
working over several days' worth of lunch hours. Great way to bring your hobby along
into your daytime hours! For more info, see Jeff's website.
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PiZZA PEEX REDUX
The Scrapbook for
June
2002 displayed some photos
I took of a delightful pizza layout in Sn2 scale, made by Russ Haigh, of Willoughby,
Ohio. The layout featured a circle of Sn2 trackage (9 mm gauge), with an elevated
length of Sn3 trackage up above (9/16" gauge). Several alert readers noticed
that, in my eagerness to show off the pizza layout down below, I had cut off the
display at the top. They asked, "What's up there, doc?" Russ has obligingly
provided photographic evidence of the facts in the case. It's the top part of the
Cavorite mine depicted on the layout.

Note that several of the buildings
on the layout -- most notably the numerous privies -- are made from Russ's cardboard
cutout kits, available in several scales under the brand name, "Spiffy Biffy's©".
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PiZZA PEEX 4
John Hubbard from Lynn
Haven, Florida, writes:
"I have been inspired by your website and the HOn30 Yahoo group to dust off
my old AHM Minitrains equipment and build a micro layout. The track plan (dare I
call it that) is a simple oval -- just a three foot length of N gauge flextrack joined
end to end. The layout measures 11" x 17", so it is a true micro (probably
a pizza).
"I am basing the scenery and scenes on the Monte Sano Railroad, which carried
passengers from the Huntsville, Alabama, main depot to a resort hotel located on
top of the mountain beside the town. The prototype was a standard gauge line, built
in the late 1800s, and it never prospered. Its only locomotive was a small Porter
steam dummy and the line was about 17 miles long. All that remains today is a part
of the old roadbed called O'Brien's Buttonhole that was nearly a complete circle,
which gives me the excuse to model a loop."

These two work-in-progress pictures
are filched from John's good-looking website, where he is documenting construction of this little HOn30 railroad.
Be sure to visit if you want to see it grow toward completeness.
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THE ART OF EXTENSION
From Italy, Ivan Furlanis sent
this idea for extending my layout, Les Peupliers. The original line, built for a micro
layout competition, was the size of two A4 sheets of paper end to end -- about 8"x23".
It's a 1/32 scale, dual-gauge railroad, crammed into a very small space and featuring
both meter gauge (32mm) and extra narrow gauge (16.5mm) trackage.

Ivan suggested, on the right-hand extension,
modeling some farm buildings where the meter-gauge line can disappear, creating a
fiddle area. Meantime, the dual-gauge track serves a farm warehouse. Then just the
narrow-gauge rails enter another building, where there is a second fiddle area and
storage for the electric switcher that serves the narrow-gauge industrial line.
On the left-hand extension there's an interesting and unusual dual gauge turnout
(replacing the original sector plate) to extend the dual-gauge track over to a loading
dock, where the narrow gauge switcher can deliver its freight loads. A small passenger
station on the left end of the layout provides a second fiddle area for the meter
gauge line. In this way, the meter gauge train can run from left to right and back
with the engine always pulling the car. As there is now a small passenger station,
we can add a small passenger railcar to the meter gauge line's service.
And all of this can be obtained in a space of about 47"x8" (119x21 cm)!
Ivan has lots of other interesting ideas and information, especially about trolleys
(trams) and trolley buses at his website.
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