As promised, here are some pictures of the two toy train layouts I made
for my nieces. The goal was to keep it simple and inexpensive and
although I lost track of some prices, each layout including train came
in at about $12 a piece with material (and about $50 a piece in labor
:)). The time was enjoyingly spent and I can't help but explain some
details of the construction. It turned out long so if too boring just
skip to the end for links to pictures.
Some background: The original set consisted of a simple battery (1 AA)
operated engine with caboose and 6 pieces of plastic, interlocking
curved track that forms about a 10" diameter circle (first picture
below). These have shown up for Easter as the "Bunny Express" and range
in price from $1.99 (Walgreens) to $3.99 (Michaels). Surprisingly, the
gearing from motor to axle is metal so it may have some life to it.
Some modifications were in order: The track needed to be attached to
something to represent a simple layout and the circle had to go. So I
bought 2 pieces of 30"x20" x 3/16 thick Elmer's foam board at the craft
store (on sale) and 4 of the train sets for extra track. To create
straight sections, 3/16" square basswood strips were used. The height
didn't quite match so some light trimming was needed to ensure a smooth
transition from wood to plastic rails and back. I ended up doing one
long straightaway on one side and S-curves on the other with two
straight connections on the ends. To break the monotony, the S-curve
section was angled, changing how close each corner is to the edge (see
pics). Also threw in a small offshoot straight section to park cars not
in use. The second layout was done as a mirror image to the first to
further add some variation when placed side by side.
Since the plastic track was only designed to interlock one direction,
the reverse curves had to be simply butted together. This and the fact
that a plain corner couldn't be made with a 6 piece circle design, meant
that a lot of cutting, fitting and aligning had to be done before
anything could be glued down (I think they call this benchwork?). This
took the most time.
Used wood glue to attach the wood strips, then spray painted the whole
thing with a medium green paint followed by an overspray of lighter
green. Decided not to paint the plastic track as sections would probably
wear off, and the yellow showing through wouldn't look good. Instead
found some matching yellow craft paint (also on sale) and rolled the
upper surface of the wood rails. Could have painted in cross ties but
that was going to take awhile. The kids can paint those in later if they
want. The plastic track was glued down with white tacky glue and for
extra grip, holes were drilled in track and #4 machine screws (heads
painted) were screwed/glued in place (used a nail for a pilot hole in
the foam).
Could have left the train colors as is (Engine: purple with silver roof
and gold stacks, caboose red with silver roof and bunny stickers...) but
wanted to experiment. A single screw held the caboose shell on and the
engine's shell pops off by squeezing the sides (also battery access).
Took the stickers off and shot a test coat of semi-gloss black on the
engine with poor results: the metallic paint reacted bad with the spray
(dried super glossy in parts, bubbled in others). Fortunately I had the
extra set and a bead blaster at work (like an encased sand blaster but
uses sandlike glass beads to strip paint or rust). Both the blasted
engine and caboose shells took paint well after that. The engines a
satin black and the cabooses a satin red/maroon that turned out good.
The caboose looked too plain though so did some taping off and sprayed
the roof and walkway black too.
This made the set look less toylike but it still needed more so picked
up some various decals on sale at Michaels: large victorian styled
single letters for the engine sides and a floral strip (it's for girls!)
down the sides of both the engine and caboose. A mini set of 3D
antiqued-clear bubble sticker numbers worked great for the headlights on
the engine and a sort of rear light on the cabooses. Used a lacquer
spray to seal everything up and help toughen up the surface for
handling.
Still not satisfied, the extra caboose bases were used to make 2
gondolas (got to have some cars to haul "stuff" around in). More
basswood pieces cut and glued together then stained, then glued to the
bases. The extra pieces cut off the round letter decals were placed in
front and back to help identify which train they belong to (each has a
different color and pattern).
Everything turned out pretty good (if I do say so meself) but I still
wasn't sure if the whole thing would actually work and there was no way
to test before everything was glued down. Would the straightaway allow
too much speed to build up and send the train off the edge at the first
curve? What about the dreaded S-curves I put in. Will the extra car
effect anything? Is the wood to plastic rail conversion going to work?
Sure it's just a cheap batt-opp toy train but I had hours of work put in
over a 2 week period! Fears were for nought. Hooked it up, flipped the
switch on the side and it went fine. Sigh...
Hopefully it will last but then again my nieces are between 5 and 10
years old and can be rough on toys. These photos may be all that's left
by years end, but maybe not. And if they like it I may be able to make a
real model railroad for them later. Anyway, on to the photos.
*** Original set.
The original Easter Collection "Bunny Express" train set in package:
http://pic18.picturetrail.com/VOL916/467126/9918192/141564588.jpg
*** Track shots.
Overhead view of layout. Second layout is a mirror image design of this
one:
http://pic18.picturetrail.com/VOL916/467126/9918192/141565178.jpg
Track conversion point close-up. This is one of the numerous points
where the original curved plastic track connects to a pair of 3/16" wood
straight rails. Also a good view of a painted screw that helps hold down
the track at stress points:
http://pic18.picturetrail.com/VOL916/467126/9918192/141566344.jpg
*** Train shots.
Engine 2 close-up:
http://pic18.picturetrail.com/VOL916/467126/9918192/141566664.jpg
Gondola 2 close-up:
http://pic18.picturetrail.com/VOL916/467126/9918192/141567030.jpg
Caboose close-up:
http://pic18.picturetrail.com/VOL916/467126/9918192/141567408.jpg
Train 2:
http://pic18.picturetrail.com/VOL916/467126/9918192/141567958.jpg
Engine 1 ("D") & 2 ("M") close-up:
http://pic18.picturetrail.com/VOL916/467126/9918192/141568804.jpg
Trains side by side on straight section:
http://pic18.picturetrail.com/VOL916/467126/9918192/141569429.jpg
Another view of trains in different areas:
http://pic18.picturetrail.com/VOL916/467126/9918192/141569801.jpg
Overhead view of train on S-curve:
http://pic18.picturetrail.com/VOL916/467126/9918192/141570080.jpg
Close-up of rear of Caboose 2:
http://pic18.picturetrail.com/VOL916/467126/9918192/141570503.jpg
*** A couple extra shots.
Caboose comparrison. Shell sitting off to right is the original; red
plastic with silver painted roof and sticker on side:
http://pic18.picturetrail.com/VOL916/467126/9918192/141570812.jpg
Loco with shell removed (no battery). Scratchbuilding a wood shell might
be fun:
http://pic18.picturetrail.com/VOL916/467126/9918192/141571083.jpg
That's all folks. Thanks for looking! :)
~Brad H.
BillsRREmpire@gmail.com - 24 Apr 2006 04:06 GMT
Brad H. wrote:
*** That's all folks. Thanks for looking! :)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Wow! Great work, Brad. Thanks for sharing. I know you enjoyed this
project. Looking forward to seeing your Halloween project.
Bill
Bill's Railroad Empire
http://www.billsrailroad.net
pawlowsk002@gannon.edu - 25 Apr 2006 15:48 GMT
Brad H. :
I fitted one of these battery engines with HO wheels.
It works but can't pull much of a grade.
Cordially yours:
Gerard P.
flyingdragon64@webtv.net - 26 Apr 2006 04:25 GMT
Thanks Bill, Wolf and Gerard! It did turn out to be a lot of fun and has
got me ready to really get started on my own layout. I checked for
lumber today to see exactly what type of wood I want to use. There's
several grades and qualities, or prices anyway. It's too bad I'm not
building a pirate ship or something as there was lots of precurved and
twisted boards for the hull. I think a few of them could have been
connected to make the edging of a big circle layout. :)
Bill posted:
~snip~
>Looking forward to seeing your Halloween
>project.
>Bill
>Bill's Railroad Empire
>http://www.billsrailroad.net
You and me both. I know I've got more ideas than time or room to fit
into this project but I need (and want) to get started on the foundation
to get a better idea of exactly how much is going to fit and how much I
can get done by October. Even if it's a sparse scene for the first year,
this train is going to be running come October 31st. :) I really should
come up with a name for it...
Gerard posted:
>I fitted one of these battery engines with
>HO wheels. It works but can't pull much of
>a grade.
>Cordially yours:
>Gerard P.
Cool idea. I didn't even think about that. Just checked with the spare
loco and HO would be too big for these but N might gauge work (In fact
they might ride on N with the stock wheels but I don't have a piece of
that scale track around to test). Will keep that in mind if I ever make
an expanded layout for those trains. :)
~Brad H.
pawlowsk002@gannon.edu - 26 Apr 2006 15:51 GMT
Brad H.:
You know, I can't remember how I did it. I will have to dig the thing
out and look.
I used to do lots of weird projects like this. I think my favorite was
the kitbashed
'Galloping Goose'-style railcar made primarily from a crown-geared slot
car chassis
and a Tyco PRR-style caboose. It was painted yellow with auto lacquer,
and
battery powered, and it ran about 700 SMPH.
Cordially yours:
Gerard P.
flyingdragon64@webtv.net - 28 Apr 2006 07:10 GMT
Gerard posted:
>You know, I can't remember how I did it. I
>will have to dig the thing out and look.
[quoted text clipped - 6 lines]
>battery powered, and it ran about 700
>SMPH.
>Cordially yours:
>Gerard P.
Sounds cool! I don't know if it's exactly the same style, but there's a
yellow one of these on Bachmann's 2006 catalog cover (one of 7 color
schemes in their new "Rail Truck" On30 series). But I'll bet it doesn't
go as fast. :)
pawlowsk002@gannon.edu - 29 Apr 2006 14:18 GMT
[regarding my kitbashed Tyco-slot car chassis rail car]
> Sounds cool! I don't know if it's exactly the same style, but there's a
> yellow one of these on Bachmann's 2006 catalog cover (one of 7 color
> schemes in their new "Rail Truck" On30 series). But I'll bet it doesn't
> go as fast. :)
FD64:
Well, I don't know since I don't have the catalog. Does it have a GP38
cab
with half a shampoo cap with a glued-on Matchbox truck grille for a
hood?
It was really more of a rail bus than a rail truck, with one drive axle
(slot car
chassis, one end removed, filed down, with rail wheels stuck on) and a
four-wheel truck (Tyco snap-in). The drive axle was in the front,
under the
hood, so this thing had some amusing tracking properties. It stayed on
the rails marginally better in reverse, but wouldn't really take any
curve
if you put brand-new batteries in it. :)
Cordially yours:
Gerard P.
flyingdragon64@webtv.net - 30 Apr 2006 16:51 GMT
Gerard posted:
>Well, I don't know since I don't have the
>catalog. Does it have a GP38 cab
[quoted text clipped - 11 lines]
>really take any curve
>if you put brand-new batteries in it. :)
>Cordially yours:
>Gerard P.
Nope; Bachmann didn't choose your version. When I did a search for the
Goose both types showed up so wasn't sure. Their's is the flatbed with
high wood side rails for cargo. Must say though, I liked the bus
versions better. More interesting.
Your's sounded like quite a complex little project. I'd forgotten you
said it was battery powered and was thinking for awhile that you'd
actually switched the wheels on the slot car chassis to train wheels,
somehow moved the brushes (that usually contact slot car track rail)
over to align with the train track rail, and powered it through the
transformer (or perhaps hooked a slot car controller to the tracks).
-Which I don't even know if such configurations would work or burst into
electrical flames, but had the idea crossed my mind when I was a kid...
:)
~Brad H.
Wolf Kirchmeir - 25 Apr 2006 15:39 GMT
> As promised, here are some pictures of the two toy train layouts I made
> for my nieces. [...]
Looks like a fun project. Well done!