From the President. (c) Scale Rails of Southwest Florida

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January 2014 (c) Scale Rails of Southwest Florida From the President. At this time of year, it is good to look back at the past year to assess how things went, and what we might want to do differently. From my perspective, the past year was a great year. Just look at all of our accomplishments last year: We had a very successful operations scheme and had 6 operating sessions. In the NMRA Achievement Program club members were awarded 8 Achievement certificates. See Dennis Little s article for more details. We built another great raffle layout, which took in almost $800 at this year s Train Show. This effort was another joint effort, with Jim Morse providing overall guidance and help, and Roger Drury, Steve Gdovin, Lee Dobyns, and Pat Flash doing some significant work on it. Roger even came down, in the middle of the summer, just to work on it. Our narrow-minded folks completely revised the narrow gauge on the Denver peninsula. It is now stocked with really great scratch built models by Jim Overman, and some innovative scenery by Jim M. And the revisions include increasing the interchange potential with the standard gauge, with the addition of cattle and lumber to the coal for three products. Great job, guys! During the summer, San Bernardino underwent a metamorphosis of sorts. Several service buildings were scratch built by Jim O based of limited photographs available. He did a great job as usual. Lee made some track rearrangements and additions that will be helpful when we start operations. Peter Gross worked on adding interiors and lights in the buildings for the downtown scene. Peter also reworked the Freight House and Ice Plant, and built a couple of the big downtown buildings as well as the Commissary building. In September, Dennis got back and went to work on the roads and park, and finalized the building arrangements. He and Jim E. added many details and people to the scene. Lee hooked up all the building lights to the power supplies. The results are there for all to see, and was very well received by the public during the Train Show. Just before the Train Show this year, we received a donation of a Z scale layout and lots of buildings and rolling stock. We spent a little bit of time getting it cleaned up and then took it to the Train Show for display only. Our thought was that we could use it as the raffle layout for the March Train Show. However, after getting it back and doing some serious reconditioning by Lee, Brian Acton, Steve and Jim M, it was concluded that it is not a good candidate for some young kid with limited knowledge of model railroading. It is vintage 1970s technology. We decided to sell it. Page 1 of 10 www.scalerails.org

Scale Rails Newsletter January 2014 Jim M found a buyer and we successfully sold it for $900. We had a very successful Train Show this year. We made more money than ever, and most of the dealers report great sales. A lot of members and spouses worked on this show, helping to make sure the workload were spread out so everyone got a chance to spend some serious time trying to find those items they can t do without. Thank you all for the contribution of your time and efforts. We also need to acknowledge the efforts of several members wives. Thank you Carol, Elaine, June, Mary Jo, and Pam for helping to make our show another great success. At our December meeting we had a great cookout and then burned our mortgage. Scale Rails now really does own the building. This is a great achievement for our club to accomplish in only 10 years and a testament to the focused effort and continued achievement by our club officers and members. Thank you one and all. In the year 2013, we added 8 new members to our club: Gerald Arends, Larry Barratt, Joe Frantz, David Howe, Ron Keck, Bob McLaughlin, Fred Smith and Mark Smith. Unfortunately, one of members, Ron Supanich, passed away in November. Also, one of our former members, Gordon Roedding, passed away in October. Looking forward to the New Year, we have a few challenges and opportunities: We want to integrate freight operations into our operating sessions. Dennis and Bob are working hard to get us there. Dennis hopes to get 4 5 members with enough hours to earn the Chief Dispatcher Certificate. We need a small team to design and build a raffle layout for our March Train Show. We will begin our clinics on January 18 and wrap it up with layout tours on April 5. We will hold a Train Show on March 15 and 16 at the Shriners Temple. This is an experiment, but it is likely to work well, and we will then continue to have our Train Show in mid-march rather than Thanksgiving weekend. Our Spring Train Show may be the last one at the Shriners Temple. They are trying to sell the facility so we need to find a new venue. We have a Train Show team working on that. We have a New Revenue Development team to see if we can find ways to assure we have a way of raising our needed revenue in the future. We need to get the residential side of San Bernardino finished up before the Spring Train Show. Dennis is busy on that. We have several houses that need to be finished. We need to get the trestle and track put in place from the cement plant to the Quarry, and get the scenery finished. Peter is working on that with some help from Jim M. We need to do proof of principle testing on LED lighting for the layout, and implement if it works out. Lee has the lead on this but will need help. We need to put up a cornice from the ceiling down to frame the upper level of the layout and provide a support structure for the LED lighting. Bob S. is working on that and will need some help. We need to install skirting on the Joint Line to dress up the balance of the layout. We need to make sure all structures on the layout are vertical, and with foundations that do not float above the ground. We need to plan and implement operations in the fall. We need to install lots of details all over the layout. Page 2 of 10

We need to prepare an article for publication in Model Railroader to go along with the photo shoot scheduled for Jan 2015. It will be a very busy year, but then, so was last year. There are opportunities for everyone to participate and help our 2014 to be successful. I look forward to it and I hope you do too. Peter SCALE RAILS and the NMRA AP PROGRAM Dennis Little, MMR Scale Rails is one of the most active Clubs in the Sunshine Region in the NMRA Achievement Program. We have award winners in every category, and one member who has all thirteen Awards. We have two Master Model Railroaders and 56 total AP certificates. Twenty-four current and past members have earned Awards. The following eight awards were earned in 2013: Author; Bob McLaughlin Chief Dispatcher; Skip Giddings Ron Supanich Steve Gdovin Pat Flash Golden Spike; Roger Drury Steve Gdovin Structures; Jim Overman The purpose of the program is to help us to become better Model Railroaders. The program is working as evidenced by the 25 Merit Award winning models on our layout and the advances we have made in Operations. If you want to learn more about the program, contact me at the Club. Florida Finds Local Logging Contributed by Dwight Segdwick There was a considerable logging business in Fort Myers in the 1920 s and 1930 s. Slater Road (about half way between Old 41 and I-75), going north off of Bayshore Road) in North Fort Myers led to a large logging camp (Slater Mill). There was also logging on the south side of the Caloosahatchee as far east as Alva. Click on the site below and be sure to go to the end of the article on the website. Click on the additional parts #2, #3, and #4. It is hard to believe that some of those locomotives actually worked. Be sure to click on #3 and get a view of the complete camp. The company office, commissary, the mills, the housing (yes, it was segregated), the kilns, the planners etc.. They also had their own currency (company money called Babbit ) that the workers were paid and could then use in the Page 3 of 10 www.scalerails.org

Scale Rails Newsletter January 2014 company store. It was all there and it was just east of us off of Bayshore Road and Slater Road in North Fort Myers. http://www.taplines.net/dc/dc1.html How I Spend My Winter Vacations (The saga of the transfer table.) By Pat Flash In 2004, I started spending part of the Winter in a small condo in Cape Coral, FL on the Gulf coast. My gracious wife agreed that I could construct an N-scale layout on a 36 by 80 door at one end of the carpeted living room. So far, after nine winters, I have managed to not spill any glue, paint, or other stuff on the rug. My wife regards this as a miracle of the first class. The original door (see photo below with legs being attached) has expanded to include an almost five foot extension. The extension is shown in the second photo (at the right.) upper left of the picture (upper right). How to raise the upper level over the door to accommodate the transfer table? I didn t have access to a chop saw so, having the reputation of being somewhat frugal, I decided to use folded heavyweight corrugated cardboard as risers. (See photo on page 5 below) Next Issue Article Deadline February 19, 2014 Publication Date February 25, 2014 My trackplan includes a transfer table under the upper level of the door part of the layout. You can see the upper level above the door in the Page 4 of 10

alignment mechanism for the entering/leaving tracks and the table tracks using some brass tubing, a ballpoint spring, and model airplane control rods. It s the old pin in the hole method and is shown in the picture that follows. So far. it seems to be working reliably. I pull the pin out using model airplane control cables, manually move the table while visually aligning the appropriate track, push the pin in, and slightly move the table until the pin spring forces the pin in the socket. These worked out remarkably well and the triangular shape provides great support for the upper level. The upper level, however, is a piece of door skin rescued from a discarded closet door in the trash at a local trailer park. The area over the transfer table developed a significant sag in the door skin area since there are no risers there. Back to the local Home Depot for a three foot aluminum angle bar. (I was not paid for this product placement.) I glued the angle to the front edge of the door skin in the transfer table area and the sag went away for a while. Another trip for a longer angle piece and the problem was permanently solved since the new angle bar spanned two risers. My original idea for the base of the transfer table, again looking for the cheap way out, was a surplus piece of Plexiglass which was supposed to slide on a piece of slippery plastic and be guided by two wood bars at the track ends. The slippery idea worked but the wood guide bars left too much play in the alignment of the Plexiglass at the ends. Back to the drawing board. For my second attempt, I went the more conventional route and used a piece of doorskin for the transfer table and drawer glides for sliding. This gave me a true forward and back movement with no wiggle. I constructed an Page 5 of 10 I replaced the top level plywood on the risers and discovered the next set of problems. Since the transfer table was now higher than the Plexiglass sheet, the trains now hit the upper level plywood. A Popsicle stick shim on each riser cured that problem but now the trains were hitting the wiring bus glued to the bottom of the upper plywood. I had to reroute the wiring bus around the transfer table area. At last, everything seems to work. Lessons learned? Many! One last lesson: I should have glued a one-half inch layer of blue foam board to the top of the upper level. This would have strengthened the plywood and made it so much easier to plant my pine and Sedum trees. The Sedum trees could provide another article on lessons learned. www.scalerails.org

Scale Rails Newsletter January 2014 Modeling the Prototype Mojave Northern By Peter Gross We are all familiar with the cement plant that is located on the back side of Victorville on our layout. This plant takes granite from a quarry and crushes it in a rock crusher before feeding it into the kilns, along with some additives. After the materials pass through the kilns, the output is called clinkers. They eventually get passed to the ball mill facility where they are ground up into a fine powder we call Portland cement. Editor's Note : Many people use the terms concrete and cement interchangeably, but the two are actually different products. Cement is a mineral (Powder) that sets and hardens to bind other materials together. Hydraulic cements, such as Portland Cement, are the most commonly used types. They harden when mixed with water. Other types of hydraulic cements include masonry cements, colored cements and engineered cements. Ready mix Concrete is a mixture of cement, aggregates, water and admixtures. (Cemex, USA) The rock crusher is in the back middle of the picture (next page), with the trestle feeding the rock dump and an elevator then feeds the rock to the rock crusher. The granite gets to the plant site via the Mojave Northern RR. This was a wholly owned subsidiary of the Southwest Portland Cement Plant. There are a lot of interesting modeling opportunities with this plant and the MNRR. We will focus on the MNRR with this story. Page 6 of 10

The granite is from a hill in the Mojave Desert (below.) Page 7 of 10 www.scalerails.org

Scale Rails Newsletter January 2014 The rock is dug by the shovel and dumped into trucks with side dump bodies. The trucks haul the rock to a loading station near the quarry where they dump the rock into rock cars on flat cars of the MNRR that also have side dump bodies mounted on them. Each dump body has about 10 yards capacity. The train of rock cars are then hauled to the plant. The task, to accomplish by the March 2014 Train Show, is to finish the trestle from the rock unloading station at the plant site, lay the track to the quarry, and build and scenic the quarry, including haul roads and the rock loading station. There is also a river to create, with a bridge crossing as above. In the photo below (on page 9), you can see the state of our modeling efforts. The curved and descending track is in place. The bents are in the plastic bag to the right. Jim Morse will shortly install the bents to give some sorely needed support to the track. Page 8 of 10

A closer look shows how sorely the track needs bents for support (below.) Jim Morse will help me do some of this due to my physical limitations. Without Jim s help, I could not finish this task, so I very much appreciate his help. Page 9 of 10 www.scalerails.org

Scale Rails Newsletter January 2014 Operations We will hold our first Operating Session of the Season on Monday, February 3rd. We have filled all positions for Yard Masters and Dispatchers. We only have 5 Engineers. We need more Engineers so we can run more trains. So, if you have not yet signed up, please reply to me in an email and tell me you will be there on Feb 3. Our plan for February 3 is: 9:00 am Training Session for Yard Masters 9:30 am -- Training Session for Engineers 10:00 am -- Start Operating Session 12:00 noon Lunch 1:00 pm -- Resume Operating Session where we left off 3:00 pm or so Finish up and debrief. Our second Operating Session is scheduled for Wednesday, February 19. If you are available, please reply to this email telling me you will be available for the February 19 operating session. Peter Gross To the reader: I hope that you have found some item of interest as those members of Scale Rails shared their visions, accomplishments, ingenuity, curiosities and insights in the articles of this revived Scale Rails newsletter. The opportunity exists for you to share your expertise or your efforts in this hobby. So far, there is a 100 percent chance of acceptance for publication. As this newsletter goes out just under the wire, I Page 10 of 10 want to assure you that the publication date will be earlier each month. By the end of this year, just as every other publication does, we should be able to give you a March 2015 issue in December. In the next issue, there will be the From the President column, Tools and Tips, roundups of the weekly Saturday clinics, another local find of historical interest in railroading, plus another Modeling the Prototype article, and who knows what else. --------------- Keith Kramer