These images were done with wireless gelled Speedlites to simulate sun or moonlight. My hope is that you will take a minute, kick your mind into neutral, and enjoy a look back to a bit of western railroading Americana.
My son and I started model railroading when he was 5 years old. He's 15 now and we don't run trains like we used to, but I wouldn't take anything for the time we spent together model railroading.
The Rio Grande Platte Canyon Subdivision is a fictional portion of the former Denver & Rio Grande Western (D&RGW) railroad and is set in early Fall of 1965. The Platte Canyon Spur extends west into the mountains from a break point just south of Sedalia, Colo, on the Joint Line. Joint Line traffic includes trains from Santa Fe (ATSF) and Colorado Southern (CB&Q) as well as the Rio Grande, just as the prototype railroad did. Most Platte Canyon Spur traffic is from the mountain coal mining district the spur was constructed to reach, but mining towns and small customers along the route are served by the railroad as well. Coal loads travel west from the mines to the Joint Line, where they are forwarded to the Colorado Fuel & Iron (CF&I) steel mill at Pueblo and electrical power generating plants along the Joint Line to Denver and points beyond.
The railroad is modeled in HO scale (1:87). It's a small layout that covers about 25% of our full basement. Staging consists of three yards that operationally represent points North, South and West of Sedalia, Colo. Each yard has four tracks. The Upper or "north" staging yard sits atop the "south" yard while the "west" yard is a stand alone that runs along a basement wall. Train detection was required for the yards since they're hidden from view during normal operations and was accomplished with magnetic reed switches on yard tracks and an LED indicator panel in the operating area. Staging eliminates trains "running in circles" and thus adds considerably to operational realism.
The Digitrax Super Chief digital system is used for train and switch route (to the staging yards) control. Many of the locomotives are sound equipped for added fun.
Much detail work remains to be done on individual scenes, but most of the landscape type scenery is complete. In addition to the 3D scenery, the railroad also sports a 24" high hand painted masonite backdrop.
Readying locomotives in the early morning light at Sedalia, Colo.
Brakeman on an SD7 locomotive waves to his friends on an adjacent track at Colorado Fuel and Iron's Split Rock #4 coal mine.
Rocky mountain moonlight at CF&I's #4 mine.