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Thomas M. Tuerke on Model Railroading


Making the Grade

There's quite a fuss being made over on Trains.Com right now, on the matter of degrees and percent, and the like. Probably much more fuss than needs to be.

T-Trak Photos

You asked; here they are... Just the module pictures. Please see the related article for the details.

T-Trak Shinkansen Extensions

A proposed set of module standards to extend T-Trak.

Thing-a-ma-lingo

As with any job or recreation, railroading (and model railroading) has its own vocabulary. I don't know if I can do justice to the whole field, but here are a few terms that might be useful to those new to the hobby.

Choo-choo-choosing how to Run your Trains

I'm of the opinion that there are two kinds of Model Railroaders, namely the ones that love to just run their trains around the track, and the ones that want to "run a railroad."

En-gauging distinctions

I see this all the time, and I'll say that I've been guilty of it myself over the years. It's the use of the terms scale and gauge, and in particular, the use of gauge when the person means scale.

Trestlation

As I'm modeling a freelanced west-coast line that runs from the coast through the Sierras and into the desert, it almost goes without saying that I'll have at least one precarious trestle crossing a granite-lined chasm...

Oh Shay!

There's something really nuts going on in the brass locomotive market right now. I mean, really nuts.

Hand Laid Track

"Way back when," my first "real" layout was on a framed 4'x8' piece of plywood, and I used store-bought (Atlas #4, I think) switches and flex track...

Welcome to the Model Railroading section...

I've been interested in Model Railroading (as compared to "Toy Trains" ;-) for ages now... it goes back as far as I remember, and got its start with an AHM train set and an oval of track one Christmas...