Thursday 12 January 2017

Philden's HO track plan



Here is a look at Philden's final track plan that I will be taking to the Brisbane Model Train Show on the 6th and 7th May, 2017. As you can see, the layout design for the first level is nothing too extravagant, (neither is the drawing itself for that matter). But at the request of Peter, (this one's for you Peter), I thought it about time that I added some kind of track plan to show the overall view of a HO scale layout that had its beginnings 2 years ago at the 2015 Brisbane Model Train Show. Of course, in the year to come a second level will go on top, so I have shown the space allocated for the upper level staging shelf support on the right, with another 6 cm of shelf to protrude out over the lower shelf staging area.

The entire layout is 260 cm (8 feet 6 inch) long and just 32 cm (1 foot and 1/2 inch) wide. With the modeled portion being 188 cm (6 foot 2 and 1/2 inch) long and the staging shelf beyond the view block adding another 72 cm (2 foot 4 inch) of track. As you can see, the staging shelf tracks fan out slightly at the right to allow a little extra room when placing trains on and off the track. The rail height now stands at 112 cm (3 foot 8 inch) from the floor. As readers can tell, it was designed to stand above my desk and somehow inspire me to write my next novel. As readers can also tell, this layout has distracted me to the point where there is no next novel in the foreseeable future.

The entire layout is simple DC operation, and required the following HO scale track to complete;


  • 1 x SL-90 PECO medium radius insulfrog double slip
  • 2 x right hand SL-95 PECO medium radius insulfrog turnouts
  • 2 x left hand SL-96 PECO medium radius insulfrog turnouts
  • 2 x lengths PECO code 100 concrete tie flextrack
  • 6 x lengths PECO code 100 black timber tie flextrack

Two years after visiting the Brisbane Model Train Show and purchasing the above track (along with a throng of other products), it will be nice to place my layout on public display for the first time at the same venue. On another side note, it will also be 15 years since I last exhibited at the Brisbane Show. I'm hoping to have my layout accepted in at least one more model train show in south east Queensland in 2017, before adding the second level to the layout and taking it to even more exhibitions in 2018 and traveling further afield. My goal was always to make Philden a layout capable of travelling to model train shows, and as nice as it looks sitting above my desk, I'm planning to add just one last touch to the display side of my layout to give it that finished 'wow' factor in time for its' first exhibition. Just what is it? Well, I might just save that as a surprise for the Brisbane Show.


Sunday 8 January 2017

Really Simple Block Wiring


If there's one thing I struggle with greatly in this hobby, it is wiring. No sooner does the soldering iron come out than my wife invariably grabs the car keys and head to the shops, and I generally find myself quitting the hobby 14 times within the next hour! So this post isn't designed to enlighten the minds of the DCC savvy circuit breaking, record making masters of electrical wizardry. It is purely for the simple DC modellers, like myself, who struggle when it comes to the thought of which wire goes where and would like to master the basic concept of creating an isolated block of track that is controlled by a simple switch. Because, let's be honest, we all have to start somewhere before we stretch our imaginations to the next level.

As you can see by the above diagram that I drew up on a piece of paper, all I wanted to do was create an small set of isolated blocks of track on my staging shelf, that by means of throwing a simple switch would cut the power to one locomotive at a time. I could then throw a switch to the other track to make that track live and bring a different locomotive into view on my bookshelf layout. The problem was, whenever I Googled anything like DC block wiring for a model railroad, the result was a series of diagrams popping up on my screen that resembled the wiring schematics of a Collins Class submarine. Thankfully, model railway wiring and I have reached a peaceful truce. I call it the KISS treaty, short for keep it simple stupid. So this little project had a simple outcome, that simply works.

Visiting my local Jaycar Electronics store, I purchased 5 toggle switches with the simple on/off lever frame, making sure that they were the version that had the on/off marked boldly in red and black. Not only do they look better in my opinion, but eliminating which way was on from which way was off made it a lot easier for me to understand what I was doing. These switches are known as SPST, or single pole single throw switches, and a good run down explaining the differences between SPST, SPDT and DPDT can be found on the website Sparkfun.

The single throw switch simply acts as a current break for the positive wire that feeds from the control pack to the rail. The block of track that will be isolated is of course defined from where you use a plastic insulator join (or carefully cut gap in the track) as shown in the above drawing, or between two insulated breaks in the rail if creating a block section on a continuous stretch of track. The negative wire is then connected to the negative rail, bypassing the toggle switch altogether. On is on, off is off, and a better explanation of how it works can be found on the website Learning About Electronics. The term common rail wiring simply means that the negative wire power feed is already connected to the negative rail (providing a common rail and negative grounding). So wiring a toggle switch using common rail wiring will only require the positive wire feed into the toggle switch and a positive wire out of the toggle switch to the positive rail. I still connected the negative wire to each section I was wanting to isolate simply because of the joins on each track where my staging shelf connected with my layout.

Mounting the toggle switches at the front of my staging shelf kept each one within easy reach.

Looking at my layout I wanted to create five isolated blocks of track. Two for each siding on the layout, two for each siding on the staging shelf and 1 for the main platform road at the station. So to keep the toggle switches reachable from a single operator's point-of-view, I drilled 5 holes centered at the front of the staging shelf, wide enough for the body of each toggle switch to sit flush with the surface.

Underneath the layout, the positive wires went in at one end of the switch and out on the other to the track above.

The wires to each switch are connected from underneath my layout. As you can see in the above photo, the single positive (red) wire has a join that connects with 2 wires that lead to the positive 'in' on both toggle switches. Each switch then has a positive 'out' wire that leads through the holes drilled to the left of picture to the two tracks above on my staging shelf. One is joined the positive rail on track A, the other is joined to the positive rail on track B. On the other hand, the negative (yellow) wire has a join that connects with 2 wires that bypass the toggle switches altogether, they lead directly through the holes drilled to the left of picture to the negative rail on track A and the negative rail on track B. It doesn't matter which negative wire connects with which negative rail above, as they both join beneath the layout and become the same wire below that feeds back to the control pack.

These simple on/off switches will control each block of track I wish to isolate.

The toggle switches I purchased from Jaycar are positioned in place from underneath the layout and secured above by a screw-on washer that tensions down on the face plate. The 9 mm plywood base on my staging shelf proved too thick however for the small clearance on the thread between the washer and face plate, so I had to make a backing plate using some scrap 3 mm MDF board. I then covered the MDF board using some leftover adhesive vinyl wrap, keeping with the same steel checker-plate pattern that I used on the back panels of my layout. I glued the backing plate in place using some craft glue and then tensioned the washers on the toggle switches until the whole assembly was held firmly in position.

Mounting the switches neatly didn't detract from the overall appearance of my layout's staging shelf.

The finished panel looks stylish, but is really, really simple. The simple switches provide simple operation on a simple block wiring section of staging tracks.

While I am still no expert at model railway wiring, sitting down to write a how-to article such as this really makes the lessons I've learned stick. For those that argue that DC control should be referred to as Dinosaur Control in this digital age of model railroading, this simple block wiring technique has stood the test of time in this hobby. With Philden now wired and ready to handle the coming-and-going of two different trains on an up-and-back layout, I feel a lot more confident that this simple project will add a lot more visual operating fun to a small layout such as mine. Now all I have to do is send in my exhibition applications and see how my new layout handles some model railway show appearances this year.

See also; Let's wire this up

Friday 23 December 2016

A Merry Philden Christmas


A year can be a long time in model railroading. Not only can you accomplish so much if you put your mind to it, but away from the edge of your model railway layout, a lot can change in your personal circumstances whether you like it or not. But for whatever our hard luck story is when it comes to the size of layout we'd like to have, or which latest locomotive we'd like to add to our collection but can't afford, Christmas is a time to reflect on those less fortunate than us, the bigger picture in life and remind ourselves of just how lucky we are as grown individuals to be able to enjoy more than the proverbial toy train set under the Christmas tree!

This Christmas, I have been fortunate enough to set up my 'train set' (if you'd like to call it that), above the Christmas tree rather than beneath it! The rush to finish my layout before Christmas Eve came about simply because of wanting to include the lights of Philden Station as a part of Christmas 2016. Trains have been such a comforting factor throughout my life. Over the years, they somehow became a constant, calming influence, whenever the world seemed to be going to the pack. Only a year ago, I had to part with some of my prized locomotives to get through a difficult financial period when the expenses of selling an overseas property met with the strain of starting a small business just when everyone seemed to be closing down for the dreaded Christmas period. Knowing that we would get through offered little comfort when I was bubble-wrapping my model trains to post off to whomever was the winning bidder on eBay. Yet 12 months on, I find myself thinking more about those less fortunate than myself. To many people the world over, a model train would be considered a waste of money. Clothes, clean water or even a cow would be higher on the shopping list of many under-privileged people in poorer countries. So to not only have completed building a bookshelf layout over the course of 2016, but having more than replaced the model trains that I sold 12 months ago makes me feel pretty blessed indeed.

Christmas still has a certain power about it. Even to the non-believer. Taking the time to wish someone a Merry Christmas still brings a smile to a stranger's face. And for those traditional among us, a Christmas tree and a train set still evoke memories of child-like anticipation on Christmas Eve. This Christmas I've come to appreciate it all. Yet it still is important to stop and realise why we celebrate it every year, when the lead-up to the end of the year sometimes takes on proportions of the end of the world! In the rush to get everything done, sometimes we forget that the greatest gift was given to us just over 2,000 years ago, when time was split between B.C. and A.D.. Jesus truly was the light of the world, and as a lifelong model railroader I can think of no better way than honouring the gift that God gave us, than turning on the lights of my model railway and the Christmas tree, and remembering that this season is all about Him.

To everyone that has followed this blog this year, I wish you all the best for this Christmas, and the safest of New Years to follow. May your trains run on time, not derail or have the cat wreak havoc on your layout. May 2017 bring you a new model train, (or two), and even if it doesn't, may God grant your fingers the skill and dexterity to not drop that tiny piece you need to complete your next kit building. If life is shining favourably on you, may you enjoy every moment of it. And if it isn't, know that better days are just around the corner. Storms never last forever. Finally, may you get the opportunity this season to experience the real peace that only Christ can deliver. It was the great teacher himself who said; "I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will not walk in darkness, but will have the light of life. (John 8:12).

Until I see you down the track next year, have a very Merry Christmas!

Cheers, Phillip