Closely following my model construction
of the signature Salt Creek Trestle has been work on Noisy Creek Trestle. Noisy Creek Trestle is the next major trestle
up the Cascade Line from Salt Creek. It
crosses a steep ravine and is sandwiched between tunnels. My model occupies one of the corner curves in
my layout room, just as the prototype trestle is built on a curve.
Noisy Creek Trestle posed new
model construction challenges, mirroring issues the Southern Pacific faced with
the prototype trestle. Part of the
prototype span fell down into the ravine in December 1964 due to a very heavy
Pacific Coast storm. A couple of freight
cars are still down in the ravine, as well.
Another heavy storm in January 2008 led to a major mudslide nearby. The damage from both of these storms closed
the Cascade Lines for a couple of months each time. While not facing storm effects, I did face
construction challenges.
Views of the trestle can be
seen on Joel Ashcroft’s website at:
Noisy Creek Trestle is three
hundred feet long and features three towers and seven girder spans. Almost every tower leg is a different
length. I am glad I developed
construction techniques for different leg lengths with the end towers for Salt
Creek Trestle. Noisy Creek required all
of that knowledge. Follow along with the
picture captions the construction and initial installation of this second major
trestle.
Noisy Creek Trestle girders
in place on the aluminum strap spine.
The girder spacers are the black blocks crossing the spine to hold the
two girders parallel to each other.
Noisy Creek Trestle tower
bents. Note that almost every leg is a
different length. Even the same-length
legs of the left tower required shortening the legs and cross struts from
the original Micro Engineering castings. I built the bents for the left tower twice, trying to get the strut gusset plates in the right places.
Noisy Creek Towers assembled
and painted aluminum.
Noisy Creek Trestle with
girders, towers and track in place. Most
of the tower leg piers were scratch-built from styrene to fit their individual
height needs. The right tower rests on
more substantial piers—a result of the reconstruction after the 1964 storm
damage. The towers rest on support
plates that in turn are adjusted to the correct height by a diagonally-cut 2x4
with splice plate (facing). Note the
rock sheds at both ends of the trestle. This is rugged terrain!
My tandem construction of two
of the three major steel trestles on the Cascade Line proved time-efficient and
definitely moved me along toward completing these signature structures. The learning curve for building Micro Engineering
trestle towers is such that my first one for Salt Creek took several days, but
the towers for Noisy Creek each took only a bit more than a day apiece. Further, I could apply all other construction
lessons learned with the simpler (though longer) Salt Creek Trestle on the more
challenging Noisy Creek Trestle.
My final Cascade Line steel
trestle, Shady Creek, will have to await another break in my formal operating
session schedule. Track alignment
choices I made during primary layout construction prevented me from installing
the trestle spine. The new spine has
been formed and awaits installation.