Video: The Indiana grandsons were in town for an evening performance of Lion King at the Schuster Center. Arriving early gave them a chance to transport trains. Liam has a mixed freight/passenger train while Lincoln is taking Princess passengers to Whittier to catch a cruise ship. | Video: Liam continues with his mixed freight/passenger train while Lincoln drops off several Princess Ultradomes and picks up tank cars, Difco dump cars, logs flat and a caboose. Never let reality get in the way of building your train! |
Video: As can be seen in this video, Liam has mastered the skill of putting rail car wheels properly on the track. |
Video: One of the rules of running trains is never let your train collide with another person's train. Liam likes to push the envelope and get as close as possible. His tactic of making Lincoln nervous and annoyed is very successful. Ah, sibling rivalry! | Video: Lincoln's extra board job finds him on short turn service, delivering a formaldehyde tank car to Crown Point. |
John begins scenery work on the Boy Scout campsite just north of Eppley's Curve. Over the years, he has acquired tents, Scouts and other accessories. |
The Boy Scout camp foam board is removed from the layout and relocated to the project table. John begins by carving a small stream and then sanding it smooth. | John lays out the Boy Scout camping items to give him an idea of their location. Lines are drawn to identify where scenic materials will be placed. |
Sculptamold is placed at both ends of the diorama creating various land contours. He also paints the stream in preparation for placement of rocks and water. |
Spring is here! Terry heads out to the balcony area adding mulch and flowers to the three blue and yellow buckets. | Yellow marigolds and a train sun catcher adorn this yellow bucket. What a beautiful break area for the train train! | Video: Rick is checking off the work order items one by one. GP40 #3010 is now functioning correctly after Rick lubricated the motor and freed up the bearings. As for the Celebrity car, he added lots of graphite to the trucks and axles which, in turn, reduced the amount of squeaking. |
Rick showing the locations where graphite was added. While working on the car the body came loose and the windows fell out. Everything was reassembled and is now back in service. | Rick noticed the Celebrity car's couplers were too low so he will take it back to The Eppley Shops and add washers between the body and the trucks. | The long shank overset couplers arrived from eBay. Rick replaced the bad coupler on the Princess railcar Sanford. He then noticed the coupler sloped downward at the end. To fix this problem he needed to create a shim. He took a thin sheet of metal and cut out a rectangle. |
He filed the rectangular piece so it fit precisely in the Sandford's coupler box. Next, he filed a taper on the metal until it sloped and became a shim. Now the coupler stays level. Amazing work from the Eppley Shops! | Video: The Sanford railcar is now ready for service. John is amazed that a locomotive can roll three Ultradomes backwards across multiple turnouts into the yard without derailment. | Video: Turnout 4-1 wasn't pivoting completely. Rick worked on it and was able to fix the problem. This video shows the train backing up successfully over the turnout. Click here to see successful forward movement. |
Video: When GP38 #2005 and GP40 #3003 were coupled together they would uncouple while running a train. It was discovered the couplers used were not Kadee. Once they were replaced, the problem was fixed. Thanks Patrick Durand for the heads up! | Video: A freight train pulled by GP38 #2005 and GP40 #3003 arrive at the southern end of the Anchorage yard. Running trains is what it is all about! |
Work continued over the past week on the Boy Scout campsite at Camp Gorsuch. The land forms at left and right were painted with dirt colored paint. The creek was painted with sky blue. Part of the campsite had Mod Podge applied and then covered with blender ground and sifted stalk plants. Mod Podge is preferred over white glue as it dries completely clear. Lastly, pine trees were mounted using white glue. |
Two days later everything had dried and was ready for the next step. Painters tape was placed over the tent sites to keep them clear. Next, Mod Podge was applied around the tents sites and over top the trunks of the pine trees. Mod Podge dries slowly and provides an opportunity to add, subtract or modify when things get screwed up. |
Ground stalk plants were applied over top of all the Mod Podge. This ground material resembles wood chips found in a typical Scout campsite. Sand from Homer, Alaska was applied over top the blue in the creek. Two more days would now be needed for everything to dry completely. |
The Eppley Shops once again worked their magic and revived GP38 #2004 from near death. All motor components were lubricated and the pesky engine noise was eliminated. Now #2004 purrs like a kitten. | Rick added a spacer to turnout 4-1 to ensure it stayed in the same position relative to the throw bar. This eliminated the partial throw problem and Rick ran several trains across to ensure smooth operation. |
Video: The long shank overset couplers seem to result in a coupler end which rocks up and down. Rick decided the Chena needed a shim. As seen last week's report, Rick cut out a thin piece of metal and then filed it to fit the coupler box. |
Once it fit the coupler box, Rick filed the metal from front to back so it created a tapered shim. Amazing work! | Video: Rick ran the entire Ultradome fleet and watched for coupler pull aparts. A common location for this mishap is climbing the hill at Whittier. As can be seen by this video operations were as smooth as glass. |
Video: Clayton's Alaska Railroad has four SD70s, two Athearn and two Kato. These six axle locomotives have a tendency to derail on the layout. The Kato units (#4001 and #4014) almost never derail while the Athearn units (#7002 and #4011) derail on straight and curved track. Rick spent a hunk of the evening trying to figure out the cause of this issue. John did some Internet research and saw other people are experiencing similar problems. Work on this will continue next week. |
With the ground cover dry, John removed the painters tape on the tent sites and glued the tents in place. An elevated sand base was created before mounting the fire-pits. Small rocks to ring the fire-pit will be added later. Next, backpacks, wood piles, log seats, people and an American flag were added. A left over piece of backdrop was placed behind the scene to add some depth for photos. | John continued work on the stream adding several different types of foliage. The American flag now flies at half mast for the National Fallen Firefighters Memorial Service. | Locomotive numbers 3002, 3015 and 7002 were marked Out of Service (OOS) and shipped to the Eppley Shops for repair. |
Feel free to contact me at john@alaskarails.org
Page created 9/4/17 and last updated 6/5/24