N&W Bridges -- Guidance Sought for a Unique N&W Prototype

NW Modeling List nw-modeling-list at nwhs.org
Sun Aug 9 22:23:36 EDT 2020


Circleville, Ohio’s freight house was very close to Hargus Creek.  The points for that turnout were located about mid-span of the Hargus Creek bridge. Not an engine facility, but prototypical. 

Don’t forget the man bridge to get to the switch stand. 

Matt Goodman
Columbus, Ohio

Sent from my mobile

On Aug 9, 2020, at 8:20 PM, NW Modeling List <nw-modeling-list at nwhs.org> wrote:

Hi Bill, 

Take a look at Williamson, WV. 

Nigel 


Sent from Xfinity Connect Application 


-----Original Message----- 

From: nw-modeling-list at nwhs.org 
To: NW-Modeling-List at nwhs.org 
Cc: nw-modeling-list at nwhs.org 
Sent: 2020-08-09 8:44:22 AM 
Subject: N&W Bridges -- Guidance Sought for a Unique N&W Prototype 

My N&W HO scale layout is about 8.5’ x 4.5’. It features the rugged terrain 
that covered much of the N&W service area, including numerous tunnels having
the effect of expanding the visual size of the layout. A prominent feature is a 
stream crossing the middle of the layout. The numerous bridges crossing this 
stream are another visual interest feature of the layout. On one side of the 
stream, a large coal mining complex located on a plateau surrounded by steep 
mountain terrain pays tribute to the N&W's historical association with the coal 
mining industry. Recently I decided to locate a steam engine servicing area on 
the “other side” of the stream (in lieu of a planned community setting). The 
steam engine serving center will include a scale 110’ turntable, three-stall 
roundhouse, and various other facilities. This area will provide a much more 
interesting active area of interest than the originally planned community with 
a siding but little else by way of active operational potential.
The change in plan presented a problem, however. The options for locating the 
large turntable and associated roundhouse were limited. Positioning of those 
facilities would also dictate the location of the rest of the facilities and 
the track within the service area. As it turned out, the most problematic issue 
involved the location of the track crossing the stream to enter this area. That 
bridge was positioned such that I could not bring a 22” radius turn into proper 
alignment with the turntable withoutlocating a turnout on the bridge itself. 
The bridge is actually quite interesting in design and execution.
My question is whether anyone is aware of a N&W prototypical bridge (of any 
kind — mine is a fairly typical girder bridge) that involved a turnout located 
on the bridge itself? If there was no similar prototypical bridge on the N&W 
system, I will nevertheless be compelled to use this bridge to access the 
turntable within the steam engine serving area, but it would be nice to know 
whether this solution has any forebear in the prototypical world is wholly a 
function of necessity and the modeler’s imagination.
Thanks for any guidance you can provide. And please do not be too offended by 
this off-the-wall innovation (heresy?). It is, after all, my layout and I can 
do what I want. But still . . . a bridge with a turnout? Really? Keeping my 
fingers crossed.
Bill D ________________________________________ NW-Modeling-List at nwhs.org To 
change your subscription go to 
http://list.nwhs.org/mailman/options/nw-modeling-list Browse the 
NW-Modeling-List archives at http://list.nwhs.org/pipermail/nw-modeling-list/


________________________________________
NW-Modeling-List at nwhs.org
To change your subscription go to
http://list.nwhs.org/mailman/options/nw-modeling-list
Browse the NW-Modeling-List archives at
http://list.nwhs.org/pipermail/nw-modeling-list/


More information about the NW-Modeling-List mailing list