A new year begins and with it comes some new toys. Where has the "Rix Rail-it Rerailing Ramp" been all my life? As the above video demonstrates, this $5.00 piece of plastic makes it baby simple to put locomotives and cars on the track. Although veteran model railroaders become quite proficient at doing this manually, this device makes it so easy a four year old can (and will) do it. |
The USB port on one of the handheld controllers went bad so we sent the unit in for repair. It returned with a new USB port as well as a new set of rechargeable batteries. Unfortunately, all the saved locomotive images/parameters were gone. John had to put all 24 locomotives on the track and re-discover them. |
John spent quite a bit of time working with the ground scenery on the south and east side of the Whittier Depot. Scenic Express Flock & Turf works well as its multicolored material adds depth. The material closest to the fascia needs to survive grandson traffic so John floods the area with a second round of 50/50 Modge Podge using eye droppers/bottles provided by Rick. |
While Terry was running GP40 #3015 last week it started acting crazy and eventually lost radio signal. During train night Rick popped off the shell to take a peek inside. He reseated the control module and checked all wiring. He also used Q-tips to clean all the wheels. Check out the filthy Q-tips in his left hand! |
Rick did a test run of the locomotive and found all issues were fixed. He set up a simple consist and then had Terry come up to try another run. She was able to successfully run the train several times around the track. She will return in the future to use the rerailing ramp to create her own consist. How fun! |
Rick continued his work of using Liquid Nails to hold the foam board in place. He completed the entire section from the north end of the double track to the north end of Alaska Marine Lines. |
The east end of the foam board at the Anchorage Depot was sagging due to no support system. Rick developed and created this wooden block structure to provide the much needed support. |
The first part of the wooden block is screwed to the underneath side of the road bed. Care must be taken to ensure the screw does not pop up into the track. The shelf piece was cut to provide the correct height for the foam board. Indeed it provided a seamless transition from the foam board to the road bed. |
John finished most of the ground level scenery to the south and east of the Whittier Depot. All that remains is a section from the white arrow shown above to the east end of the depot. A total of eight different types of material provides a feeling of depth. |