Having built a model railroad
for operations, I find it useful to mark milestone sessions such as the
just-completed twenty-fifth such session.
It has taken a little less than three years to reach this
milestone. My position in the
Portland-based operating layout rotation (First Saturday of a month) results in
a number of bye-months due to holidays and other interruptions. Still, I have held a fairly steady pace of
operating sessions on my railroad. Each
session prompts further improvement and motivates me to keep working toward
fleshing out the railroad.
Over the past year, I
introduced a train line-up scheme that attempts to model the twenty-four hour a
day operation of a real railroad. From
my master daily line-up, I begin building the next session’s line-up where we
left off from the previous session. I
always plan more trains than we typically run.
We usually stop with one or two trains out on the railroad yet. That provides immediate work for crews when
we resume—work that does not require yard activity to get rolling.
The RR-Westbound EUOAY
(Eugene to Oakland mixed manifest) meets the RVEUE (Roseville to Eugene Empties—an
“XMUG”) at Cruzatte. The EUOAY began the
session at Oakridge, ready to have its helper added. The RVEUE was the first train RR-Eastbound out
of Crescent Lake.
Moving to a twenty-four-hour
line-up also spaced-out the local freights.
These locals need to be sequenced, particularly in the Springfield area,
to keep the railroad fluid. Three locals
work around Springfield. Two of them
need the depot and drill tracks to do their work. The third uses the siding on the other side
of the mainline. Spacing these out
resolves the conflicting use of the depot and drill track and keeps at least
one track available in addition to the mainline for meets. My condensation of the actual Cascade Line
removed the Judkins siding, located between Eugene (depot) and
Springfield. Keeping another track
available at Springfield restores this vital safety valve for entry and exit from
the Eugene terminal. For further
understanding of these tracks, take a look at the track schematics via the tab
at the top of the blog page.
Nineteen operators joined me
for this session, a typical crew size.
Two operators were new to the railroad, so they were paired with
experienced operators on trains. The
rest of the trains had single engineer-conductors plus the Eugene Yard crew and
dispatching crew. In addition to the
session “Trick” Dispatcher, we use an Assistant Chief Dispatcher/Crew Caller
(ACD). The ACD calls the crews and
manages the calling up and departures of trains. This is a role often filled by a layout
owner, but we have found my attention becomes focused on dealing with minor “crises”
on the railroad, so the ACD keeps the railroad rolling.
John B-1. occupies “The Big
Chair” as the session “Trick” Dispatcher.
Tools of his trade include a magnetic schematic of the railroad, a Train
Sheet, a Block Authority Sheet, the clock, and a radio. It is useful to have the Dispatcher located
in a room that can be closed off from the noise and chaos of a railroad at
work.
The primary Eugene Yard
crew. Jim M., in the far distance is
departing with the Marcola Turn from one of the “City Yard” tracks in front of
the depot. Yardmaster Scott B. is
tasking West Switcher John B-2. With classification work while East Switcher
Craig L. is moving toward his end of the yard (right).
Santa Clara Tower Operator
Vic N. is back in the hole for the Eugene Engine Facility while Road Engineer
Rodger C. prepares to depart with the BROAT (Brooklyn—Portland to Oakland
Trailers). Crescent Lake, the RR-West
end of my railroad is overhead.
A feature of this particular
session was a fleet of three trailer trains which departed Eugene starting with
the first around midnight on the fast clock.
The Dispatcher needed to clear the way for these high-priority trains. This also provided me with some good “railfanning.” The trailer trains have their helpers added
on the point—the front of the train, per railroad rules for trains with 89-foot
cars. Other trains have their helpers
added mid-train, about two-thirds of the way back for the current era on my
railroad (1984).
Rodger C. and his Conductor
Craig P. have escaped Eugene and are rounding the turn-back curve with my
Marcola Branch out of Springfield on the inside. Those autoracks and trailer-on-flatcar at the
front of the train will demand a point helper at Oakridge.
The BRLAT (Brooklyn to Los
Angeles Trailers) is crossing Noisy Creek and headed into my Tunnel Nine and
into Cruzatte as crew-members (David L., Pete H., and Dave C.) converse. The BRLAT was the first of the RR-West fleet
of priority trains. Even a priority
train has a slow grind up the Hill.
The BROAT has made it to
McCredie Springs. This was the second
priority train headed RR-West. Rodger C.
and Mike B. are the Engineers (Mike has the point helpers). Conductor Craig P. is copying orders from the
Dispatcher.
The CZLAT (Crown Zellerbach
to Los Angeles Trailers—a train focused on Crown-Zellerbach paper products)
rounds the curve at Westfir, crosses the bridge over the North Fork of the
Willamette River and is about to plunge into Tunnel 22 and into Oakridge. Engineer Rick A. and Conductor Mark K.
control this train. Behind them is ACD
Rick K. talking with the crew of a RR-East train held at Wicopee (Conductor
Bill M. on the platform), awaiting passage of the RR-West parade of priority
trains.
The CZLAT now has a helper
and is rounding the curve over Salt Creek Trestle—a prime railfan moment!
As I fill in my railroad with
the trestles, tunnels and now terrain, it is feeling more and more like the
Cascades. My dream is becoming a
reality.
I'm looking forward to seeing and operating this in person!
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