With trains rolling in Springfield, the time has come to
expand the empire to the next station: Oakridge. The steam era helper station of Oakridge will be the heart
of my SP Cascade Line. Its
principal function will be the addition of helpers for the mountain climb. Oakridge also provides a key industry
role, serving a pair of large lumber mills: Pope and Talbot to the geographic
east and Western Lumber at Westfir to the geographic west. The Oakridge local will serve both
mills, taking their products back to Eugene for classification (switching into
trains) further movement.
<Recall my sidebar note about Southern Pacific railroad
geography in Oregon. Tracks headed
TO San Francisco are “west bound.”
Tracks headed AWAY from San Francisco are “east bound.” In Oregon, this means most RR
directions are opposite geography.
Oakridge is a prime example of the confusion, as RR-West is at the
geographic east end of town. My
blog posts identify the railroad geography with a “RR-east or –west” identifier.>
My HO scale version of Oakridge will feature all tracks
present in 1954, albeit with concessions to space available. The RR-West yard throat quickly splits
into two switch ladders for the mainline and depot tracks and the four yard
body tracks. A long lead for the
engine house and wye also takes off from the RR-West throat.
Oakridge RR-West throat. Tracks are (left to right): House, Siding, Main Line, and
four yard body tracks. Engine
house lead breaks off to the right of the yard body track switch ladder.
Oakridge depot area looking
RR-East from the RR-West throat.
My layout design efforts consistently found a need to employ
a “pinwheel” ladder on the RR-East end, somewhat similar to the real
Oakridge. My HO scale version
features a much sharper ninety degree turn with many implications to the
switchwork. In a very short
distance, the RR-East end throat must split into roughly four switch ladders
for the depot tracks, yard body tracks, engine house, and miscellaneous spurs
within the turning wye, and then cause all of those tracks to bend ninety
degrees.
Oakridge RR-East throat splitting into four track groupings
for the depot tracks, yard body tracks, engine house and miscellaneous stub
tracks in the turning wye.
The Oakridge RR-East throat puts to test my design minimums
of 42 inch mainline radius, #8 turnouts on the main and 36 inch minimum radius
and #6 turnouts off the mainline.
I began by laying out the depot tracks, working to keep the mainline
standards in place for the main and siding. In the end, I was able to keep a broad radius on the house
track, as well. I originally laid
out the switch ladder for the four yard body tracks using all #6 switches. Geometric reality set in as I got very
precise with the track layout and I realized in a “duh!” moment that at least
the first switch for the yard tracks needed to be a #8 switch to match the
close-by geometry of the depot tracks.
A similar consideration added another #8 switch as the first one serving the engine
house. It looks like the
subsequent #6 switches will remain as such.
I am now wrestling with getting the engine house tracks into
and around the engine house in the available space. In the image below, four curved tracks are heading toward
the space blocked out for the engine house. Unfortunately, there actually need to be five tracks
here. I am contemplating a
custom-built curved switch or two, but it looks like I might just make it with
short-length #6 switches. This is
work in process, so you might see a completely different arrangement in later
posts.
Initial
track layout for Oakridge engine house.
One more track must be fit in the space of the inner three tracks shown.
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