Author Topic: Freelance Lines  (Read 1724 times)

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brokemoto

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Re: Freelance Lines
« Reply #15 on: January 23, 2025, 10:17:50 PM »
+1
I believe that Kato recently released another run of NW2's and prices are about $100 now from the dealer or webstore of your choice.

Thank you for the update.  I found one and ordered it.

carlso

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Re: Freelance Lines
« Reply #16 on: January 23, 2025, 11:11:48 PM »
+3
Here Are some images of my " Home Road ", the CD&WJV. That is the Chama Draw & Western Jemez Valley RR.

1st - the only diesels I have done :









The only steamer that I have done is this Bmann EM-1 bash job.



PS - I got the name by using the 1st letter of each family members 1st name :

     Carl, Diane, & Wes, James, Virginia
       Be well !




   


Carl Sowell
El Paso, Texas

Bruce Archer

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Re: Freelance Lines
« Reply #17 on: January 26, 2025, 08:39:01 PM »
0
Hi All!
    My home road is the Delaware and Atlantic. In my world the D&A formed a stratigic partnership with the D&H(so I can still have lots of D&H) in the 1920s Since the D&A had lines to NYC, Philadelphia, Southern NJ and eventually buying LNE and O&W routes.  Because of the partnership, each road fed traffic to each other which allowed both roads to remain solvent during the 30s and 60s. The partnership continued through Doreco, it was very heavily strained during Guilford and became a partner with CP Rail. As it is my road I can run what I want (including many junk box cars).

Bruce Archer
Modeler of the D&A, D&H and LNE

randgust

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    • Randgust N Scale Kits
Re: Freelance Lines
« Reply #18 on: January 28, 2025, 01:10:08 PM »
0
How about a main line railroad that was chartered, built but never ran?

I came across an abandoned roadbed through my daughter-in-law's parents property just east of Canton, PA.  Clearly railroad, and built like a main line with cuts and deeper fills.   Sure not a logging grade, not PRR, and none of my historic railroad maps showed it.   Puzzled, baffled I researched......

How about a railroad with a big corporate name that went bankrupt immediately after construction?  The Pittsburg, Binghamton & Eastern......

https://www.joycetice.com/articles/illstar.htm
https://forestandfield.blogspot.com/2021/06/the-railroad-that-never-ran.html

They had a bunch of burly 2-8-0's on order from Rhode Island, never got delivered, ended up on BAR, one was the 170.   Bachmann 2-8-0's, essentially.   And it was built late, things didn't crater until 1907.
https://railroad.net/pittsburgh-binghamton-eastern-rr-t37368.html

That would make a great model railroad concept, you have all those eastern connections, and they already had locomotives that were built but never delivered....
« Last Edit: January 28, 2025, 01:14:50 PM by randgust »

Ike the BN Freak

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Re: Freelance Lines
« Reply #19 on: January 29, 2025, 12:04:32 AM »
0
I don't have my own home road, but I like getting decals from fellow modelers and painting up 50' boxcars to add to my fleet. I got the decals and cars, but I just need to spend the time to paint the cars up and decal them.

dem34

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Re: Freelance Lines
« Reply #20 on: January 29, 2025, 12:16:47 AM »
0
How about a main line railroad that was chartered, built but never ran?

I came across an abandoned roadbed through my daughter-in-law's parents property just east of Canton, PA.  Clearly railroad, and built like a main line with cuts and deeper fills.   Sure not a logging grade, not PRR, and none of my historic railroad maps showed it.   Puzzled, baffled I researched......

How about a railroad with a big corporate name that went bankrupt immediately after construction?  The Pittsburg, Binghamton & Eastern......

https://www.joycetice.com/articles/illstar.htm
https://forestandfield.blogspot.com/2021/06/the-railroad-that-never-ran.html

They had a bunch of burly 2-8-0's on order from Rhode Island, never got delivered, ended up on BAR, one was the 170.   Bachmann 2-8-0's, essentially.   And it was built late, things didn't crater until 1907.
https://railroad.net/pittsburgh-binghamton-eastern-rr-t37368.html

That would make a great model railroad concept, you have all those eastern connections, and they already had locomotives that were built but never delivered....

If you want this but electrified. The Trenton and Atlantic which was similar. Trees cleared, Roadbed graded, Ties laid, Catenary strung debates between if it got between Point Pleasant and Trenton or just Lakewood won't quite be solvable with the lack of good sources. But unfortunately Imperial Russia needed rails and the USRA determined the railroad's staging yard was good source of war material. Company probably wouldn't have survived the 20s if it did get build completely but the ROW still sort of survives intact as a High Tension Power line.
-Al

TinyTurner

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Re: Freelance Lines
« Reply #21 on: February 24, 2025, 07:10:44 PM »
0
I am trying out the protolancing technique, based on Milw practice rather than total freelancing.
Without deliberate constraints, the challenge is not there. 
It makes it fun to see what I can get into a limited space, yet keep it scale, getting the atmosphere right for what I think it should be, even down to the smells!  The aroma of engineering oil fills the room from 1:1 machine tools and sets the scene.  Evocative  :)
It involves a lot of how I would do it 'if I were a railroad manager' perspective, coupled with the theme I would like in the space I have available. 
What freight do I ship and how do I turn a profit?
My first thoughts towards this were from playing Railroad Tycoon games, which are basic simulations that got me thinking about how to work ops vs train set running.

There is room for a fictional road colour scheme sometime and maybe even new locomotive classes, which takes models full circle back to the original use for model engineering, developing 1:1 technology.
 
I take inspiration from various sources, including movies and video games, which are all art as far as I am concerned.
Transarctica for example, massive trains through a frigid snowscape, dwarfing even the bigboys on ultra broad gauge. 
Or the forest of Boland light railway, ran by Gnomes.  Someone actually modelled this way back, an accurate fantasy light railway from a children's book. 

Artists take scenes, compress them together to get the desired effect and boom, pull of a convincing scene.
It works this way with models too. 
Don't need to be too rigid, even when aiming for a specific location.  It can be refreshing to try something new. 
Serious fun  :)