164/365 – Dredge, photo by dcclark (catching up again!). Brenden Balliod’s Great Lakes Shipwreck Research (a fantastic resource for divers & historians) has this to say about the Qu…
Part 1 of laying foam railroad trackbed on my 4x8 layout, as well as building grade risers out of expanded foam.
Quincy Mine Hancock Michigan - abandoned, quincy, mine, hancock, michigan. Photorator photo.
Last summer I made my second, but hopefully not last, trip to the Keweenaw Peninsula on Michigan's Upper Peninsula. It's a fabulous place wh...
This abandoned locomotive rusts outside the buildings of the Quincy Smelter, an abandoned mining industrial complex near Hancock, Michigan in the Keweenau Peninsula.
Last summer I made my second, but hopefully not last, trip to the Keweenaw Peninsula on Michigan's Upper Peninsula. It's a fabulous place wh...
Last summer I made my second, but hopefully not last, trip to the Keweenaw Peninsula on Michigan's Upper Peninsula. It's a fabulous place wh...
The Quincy Mine was one of the most successful copper mines in Michigan's Upper Peninsula and today it is open for tours that go underground into the mine.
The word “amazing” is greatly over-used these days, especially on the Internet. That’s why I’m careful about using that adjective. After all, if everything is amazing, one day we may wake up and find that nothing is. But when it comes to Tom Cox’s Lake Superior-style ore dock and model of the Edmund Fitzgerald, the word is totally appropriate. It is simply amazing. Tom’s ore ore dock, which is still under construction, is modelled after those found in Duluth, MN. The dock is 18 feet long. It resides on his HO scale layout, set in the 1960s-70s in Minnesota and northwestern Ontario. The double-track ore dock, which is made out of wood, took Tom 1,600 hours to build. It features scratchbuilt bridgework leading up to the ore dock. It can handle ore trains of 70 cars in length; the trains reach the dock on a 45-foot long approach with a four percent grade. To get to the top, the cars are pulled up a four percent grade by a trio of brass SD9s. Just before the dock, they uncouple and run around the train and shove it on to the dock. The elevated portion leading the dock is about 30 feet long. All the bridge girders that make up the approach are a scale 60 feet long. There are a total of four girders that make up each section. Only the exposed end girders are super detailed. Below the dock is a model of the Edmund Fitzgerald, the famous laker that sank in Lake Superior November 10, 1975. Tom took a resin kit of the ship, manufactured in limited quantities a number of years ago, and lengthened it from the original 5 1/2 feet to a more realistic eight feet, four inches long. (A scale 729 feet.) The dock is also lit, with 87 lights, and includes a 38 foot-long scratchbuilt catwalk (which took almost 1200 hours to build.) This is the second ore dock that Tom has built; the first was on a previous layout which he dismantled in 2000. That dock took 950 hours to build. Tom's first ore dock. Tom's current 22 by 40 foot layout is based on the Duluth, Winnipeg and Pacific line from Winnipeg to Duluth. It features operations by a number of railroads, including GN, NP, DWP, DMIR, MILW, CNW, SOO-CPR. The layout also features one of Tom's favorite areas—Sioux Lookout, Ontario. "I used to go fishing there, and I fell in love with the place," he says. When he isn't working on the layout, Tom is a professional custom builder and weathering specialist at Red Pine Precision Modeling. The prototype. Below find a few photos of Tom's first layout. Once his current layout is scenicked like that one, it won't just be amazing--it will be spectacular.
Leon and Kathy Serre from Berkshire Junction Model Railroad Supplies demonstrate how to create a campfire for your model railroad scenes.
Today I started the installation of the staging deck for the layout. It will have six (6) tracks for storage, one arrival departure track, and a return loop. The plan below shows the location of the deck, the tracks and return loop. It also shows the connection between the helix and staging. 📷 Plan updated 22/12/18
Model railroading is a fun and rewarding hobby that can provide hours of entertainment. However, after building a layout, some model railroaders may find that their layout lacks excitement. In this…
Model Railroad Hobbyist magazine, available to model railroaders and model trains enthusists to read online completely free. Model Railroading Advertiser-supported.
Explore UpNorth Memories - Don Harrison's 124628 photos on Flickr!
Troubleshooting vintage O gauge locomotives isn't hard. Here's what to look for when things won't run and how to fix it.
Hi all I am going to need a small turntable for my new RR and would like to have a go at scratchbuilding it. Can anyone offer any pointers to others that have fully scratchbuilt a reliable turntable? Any good articles floating around? I did read the article here on the turntable & roundhouse but the author used a commercial TT kit so I am hoping someone may know of a total scratchbuilt resource for TT's Cheers Bruce