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Micro Layouts Using No Switches
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Layouts for Fun to
Run
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The other category of layouts with no turnouts
are the round-and-round exhibition layouts that make no pretense of being anything
but a circuit. They're a lot of fun for exhibiting our models in attractive settings,
breaking in new locos, and generally showing off our scenic skills to our fellow
modelers. At the left is an excellent example built by Steve Bennett of Black Dog Mining Co. This little "pizza" layout is built on a 12"x12" ceiling tile, in On30 (O16.5) scale. As with all of Steve's layouts, the scenery is meticulously detailed and skillfully planned. Steve's website pictures several more of these wonderful little racetracks in various scales. You can have a lot of fun designing, building, and playing with one of these tiny "pizzas"! |
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![]() If you like making scenery and still want to have a small round and round layout, the concept at the right may be for you! I designed it as the ultimate in pizza layouts. It represents a construction railroad at a dam site. The train actually traverses the top of the dam, on its way to dump loads of excavated rock into waiting standard gauge cars below. Finally, it returns to the diggings (not modeled) by way of a spectacular high arch bridge that opens directly into a tunnel--Swiss style. Designed for Gn15 scale in a 15"x15" space, the 6" minimum radius would permit the Dam Site layout to be built in HO, OO, S or O narrow-gauge scales as well! After you've had lots of fun running trains and dumping loads, you can try adding real water--pumped out of the dam spillway, running down the canyon, and finally slipping quietly back down into the reservoir at the bottom! |
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If you'd like a longer run in a
pizza-box sized space, try the Crater Lake Construction Site railroad. With
a 6-inch minimum radius, this twice-around design could be made in Gn15 ... but the
grades would be pretty steep! Try it in On30, On2, or On18--or even HOn3 or HOn30.
You can have a pretty long run--almost 3.5 feet--preferably in a clockwise direction
so the uphill pull is on the easier grade. |
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A Christmas Centerpiece Layout
Should be a real crowd-pleaser! In addition, Jim has begun to get together a web site dedicated to Gn15 (1:24 scale on 16.5mm gauge), the scale that's rapidly becoming a favorite of model railroaders' spouses! |
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![]() Gn15 "pizza" layouts seem to be the rage this year! Here's another -- not quite round -- being built by Jeff Semprebon. It's called the Little Egg Railway, and attempts to see how much Gn15 layout can be squeezed into 24"x18". There's a mill with its wheel, and Jeff plans to have real water running beneath the mill wheel, to turn it. Access for rearranging the train's consists is at the rear, and the Gallery editors have suggested a place to add a standard turnout, if you can't bear to be without a little switching capability. Jeff also suggests that the straightaways, which make Little Egg different from pizza layouts, are good places to join the pieces of flex track that make up the loop ... without kinking. A good trick to use in designing many small layouts. All in all, a good egg, this pike! |
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