Well, after that dusty fallout from the renovation drywall, my cleanup of the layout is finished, done over the course of a few days. Certainly not 8 work hour days or anything like that, but probably about 6 or 7 hours of actual working time.
The whole layout surface has been vacuumed, so it looks pretty good now, although bits of gravel and some scenery unintentionally made it's way into the vacuum. And the buildings and structures have all been cleaned off as well. And I also ran the CMX Track Cleaner around for a while to clean up the rails...again.
Changed a few things around on the layout while I was at it. I changed locations of some of the industrial structures. It's pretty easy for me to do that as 3 of the industries take up the same dimensional footprints as each other. Mounted on the same size pieces of MDF creates kind of a "structure module", so I can just slide back the rail joiners that connect each structure module to the rail spur and then lift out the whole structure and rail spur. Really, I could swap them around any time I wanted. It takes me about 5 minutes to disconnect, lift out, replace and reconnect a structure module.
Here's the left end corner of the layout as it looked before with Mid-West Plastics as the industry.
Hi Jim,
ReplyDeleteI've visited your blog intermittently before, but I decided I need to check it more often. I've added JSSX to my Trackside Treasure blog sidebar as a featured blog. I appreciate your layout, awesome weathering and the fact that you keep blogging regularly. Keep up the great work!
Eric Gagnon
Kingston, ON
Thank you very much Eric for your kind words and the add to your sidebar. I check in on your blog regularly.
ReplyDeleteI like the idea of interchangeable module industries. It isn't new, but it is certainly done effectively on your layout.
ReplyDeleteThanks. I took the idea from George Dutka and his White River Division, and applied it to my larger industries.
ReplyDelete