Operations on my SP Cascade Line are settling into a monthly
pattern. This is a VERY good
thing! The BIG push to get the
layout ready for the NMRA National Convention in August now pays dividends in
the form of an operable railroad and a fairly sizeable crew of folk willing to
show up for operating sessions.
I had thought of taking a “bye month” in December as many
have other obligations during the holiday period. My regulars convinced me otherwise, so we held a “casual”
session on December 5. This coincided
with an annual swap meet a half hour down the road, so we settled on a later
start and a short session. A dozen
folk showed up, mostly my “regulars.” A good time was had by all.
My track laying of the past month was just that—track. I did not complete getting electrons to
those same tracks, so the railroad physical plant remained the same as the
previous operating session other than a couple of repairs. My restaging effort was
modest for this session as it was to be “casual.” I moved the Marcola Turn out of the Eugene Yard where it was
left at the end of the last session and staged it in Springfield, ready to do
its work. Similarly, the Oakridge
Turn was ready after a couple of key cars were added, so it, too, was moved out
and over to Oakridge to start the new session. Both of these actions cleared critical spaces in the Eugene
classification yard, which helped a great deal.
Another bit of staging action was to move full trains to
their appropriate staging yards.
This is necessary because the train composition of RR-West
trains--lumber drags and mixed manifest freights--is quite different from the
RR-East trains, still with mixed manifests, but the lumber empties are now
solid blocks of lumber box cars and empty flats.
The first such train I needed to move from Eugene to
Crescent Lake ran into a problem in the Eugene Arrival/Departure Yard reverse
loop as I moved to turn it around.
About a third of the way into the loop track it started derailing. Inspection found about ten inches of the
outer rail had popped out of the Micro Engineering flex track to create wide
track gauge. I spent fifteen
minutes spiking that rail into the correct position. After that, the re-staging went very well. What a joy to run trains on my own
railroad!
Eugene Arrival/Departure Yard. Note there are now twelve loop tracks (on the right) and
five widely-spaced tracks for the new diesel service facilities. The new tracks have blue flags on
them (blue painters tape) showing they are out of service yet. Just beyond the caboose in the distance
is the track where the outer rail popped out of its flex track spikes which
required manual spiking by me to force it back into gauge.
With a modest crew size (not the “full” crew of twenty),
operating jobs were parceled out amicably. One “newbie” (welcome Rodger C!) was paired with an
experienced operator (for my layout) for his initial runs, but otherwise we
used single man crews. Dave H.
dispatched, releasing Rick K. to run one of the locals. I should have insisted at least one
other person help David B. in the Eugene Yard, but neither he nor the operating
scheme suffered (much).
Rick K. works the First Springfield Switch Job, which
services the depot side of the Springfield mainline.
Tom D. guides a train into
Wicopee.
Norm A. finishes up work with the Oakridge Turn as he
prepares to return to Eugene by way of Westfir and the other half of his work.
Dave H. serves as Dispatcher as Rick A. looks on. Rick A. actually was studying the
workflow and had a very useful suggestion at the end of the session. I hope to see that play out within a
couple of months.
Rodger C. (now operating alone) watches his train as AMTRAK
Number 11 climbs toward Cascade Summit.
John B. (near) takes a break from his Crew Caller duties to
serve as a helper engineer for the freight Mike B. (rear) has just brought into
Oakridge.
My faithful companion Phreddie takes it all in and wonders
when the next treat will come his way!
Now that my railroad is settling into a monthly operating
pattern, I need to develop a balance among construction projects, repairs,
tweaks and tuning for operating glitches, staging and other organizational
duties for operating sessions.
This “casual” session with a smaller crew composed mostly of my regulars
helped bring much of that into focus.
I had sufficient time to brainstorm several ideas for operations
organization with my regulars.
very Great post.. thanks for sharing bro.. keep up the very good work.
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