Garden Railway Woes
- Lancastrian
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Garden Railway Woes
For quite some time now for varying reasons I have not been able to cut the grass in the back and weeds and grass doing what they do, they had completely taken over the back hiding any signs of track. Last Wednesday I decided that with it being such a nice day I would venture out and cut the grass. All was going when until the mower started jumping around and making a horrible grinding sound, yes you've guessed it, it was a piece of track cut and mangled, on the bright side the blade being made of hardened steel was undamaged. As is usual on a Wednesday night Chris my son, came for his tea after work, and after discussion he suggested waiting until spring and raising the track, so, we will lift all the track and lay it higher but not sure yet how or by how much, and to sort out the canal
When first laid, with a tunnel in the making.
and after being hovered.
......and so it's watch this space or rather the garden in spring.
When first laid, with a tunnel in the making.
and after being hovered.
......and so it's watch this space or rather the garden in spring.
Last edited by Lancastrian on Tue Nov 23, 2021 11:32 am, edited 3 times in total.
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Re: Garden Railway Woes
Oh dear.....
Modelling On A Budget ---》 https://www.newrailwaymodellers.co.uk/F ... 22&t=52212
- End2end
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Re: Garden Railway Woes
In the immortal words of the man trapped on a boggy moor.... "you silly sod"
Such a shame. It does give the chance to change or implement new ideas though!
Thanks
End2end
Such a shame. It does give the chance to change or implement new ideas though!
Thanks
End2end
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- Lancastrian
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Re: Garden Railway Woes
Thanks for your concern and comforting words.End2end wrote:In the immortal words of the man trapped on a boggy moor.... "you silly sod"
Such a shame. It does give the chance to change or implement new ideas though!
Thanks
End2end
I think actually taking everything into account It may be a case of a more simplified circuit.
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Re: Garden Railway Woes
Can I ask what your track is lying on now?
I used two main sub-structures: for a straight embanked stretch, square section drain pipe (2 wide) propped at 2ft intervals and then the embankment pushed in to stabilise it.
Elsewhere stamped earth, levelled with sand topped with twin-wall polycarb sheeting. about 6y" wide for a single track. It's proven stable, but it's very easy to adjust by packing sand in or scraping it out. Only on one curve did I find it worth adding stakes inside the curve, wired to the sleepers at intervals to stop "drift" outwards.
Chris
I used two main sub-structures: for a straight embanked stretch, square section drain pipe (2 wide) propped at 2ft intervals and then the embankment pushed in to stabilise it.
Elsewhere stamped earth, levelled with sand topped with twin-wall polycarb sheeting. about 6y" wide for a single track. It's proven stable, but it's very easy to adjust by packing sand in or scraping it out. Only on one curve did I find it worth adding stakes inside the curve, wired to the sleepers at intervals to stop "drift" outwards.
Chris
"It's his madness that keeps him sane."
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Re: Garden Railway Woes
My track is G, scale 1:22.50, gauge 45mm, approximately 3½ inches and laid on concrete. I am not sure yet how we will doing it but the pipe definitely gives food for thought.
This is the current layout taken a few years ago when making some slight change to the sidings and the pond.
This is the current layout taken a few years ago when making some slight change to the sidings and the pond.
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- End2end
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Re: Garden Railway Woes
Lancastrian wrote:Thanks for your concern and comforting words.
Thats a great bridge and some lovely Koi too!
Thanks
End2end
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Re: Garden Railway Woes
Thanks, the bridge was made by my son and only cost £8.00 and that was for a box of spokes from the bike shop, the main frame was made from the aluminium frames of some folding doors I threw out.End2end wrote:Lancastrian wrote:Thanks for your concern and comforting words.
Thats a great bridge and some lovely Koi too!
Thanks
End2end
If you want to see how Chris made it, there is an article HERE
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Re: Garden Railway Woes
I actually meant the bridge over the pond, but that's a great railway bridge too! Great work Chris.
Thanks
End2end
Thanks
End2end
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Re: Garden Railway Woes
Oh sorry, that was also made by Chris but of course I had to supervise.End2end wrote:I actually meant the bridge over the pond, but that's a great railway bridge too! Great work Chris.
Thanks
End2end
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Re: Garden Railway Woes
This picture shows more clearly, bottom right, the section that I mangled up.
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Re: Garden Railway Woes
Interesting: relative to the track the grass wants to be either higher or lower.Lancastrian wrote:This picture shows more clearly, bottom right, the section that I mangled up.
If the edge dips down, cutting in from the edge for a turf "flap" that could be raised with infill soil/compost could be an easy way in.
If on concrete dropping the track isn't really an option.
An alternate to raising the track, (if the ground is firm) something like spaced round metal tent-pegs?
for a guess 5-6mm rod, about 200 mm long, each?
Could be joined by wire for a fence (the loop on the railway side. ) High enough to stop the flymo but room to be clear of the trains?
Otherwise it's raising the track to make an embankment with some sort of lawn-edging to stop the mower.
If there's a decent lazy way, that's the one I want.
Chris
"It's his madness that keeps him sane."
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Re: Garden Railway Woes
This is an old photograph Chris, but we do plan to raise the track, not sure how much though and re-organise the garden but not sure yet what we (I really mean Chris, although I will help) intends to do. The problem is I am not getting any younger and have to consider not least bending and general garden maintenance. The easy option is one that we definitely be taking though.
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Re: Garden Railway Woes
This is why the garden clinched my house to me. The lower level is 3-4 ft higher than the path next to the house. Near perfect.
In my former town house I just had a fairly small bare yard so I had brick raised beds put in, having designed them so that they would work *without* the trains for any new buyer.
Chris.
In my former town house I just had a fairly small bare yard so I had brick raised beds put in, having designed them so that they would work *without* the trains for any new buyer.
Chris.
"It's his madness that keeps him sane."
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Re: Garden Railway Woes
An unusual but very interesting set up Chris, I like it.
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