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Have a JAM Breakfast on Thursday, July 2nd

David Yadock

Thursday, July 2nd marks the birthday of John Allen. He constructed the famous Gorre and Daphetid Railroad (pronounced “gory & defeated”). It was a true model railroading marvel. The Gorre & Daphetid Yahoo group usually celebrates with a JAM (John Allen Memorial) breakfast. John Allen was a real pioneer in model railroading. Just like Frank Ellison, Whit Towers, and many others, he promoted many of the things we now take for granted in our model railroading hobby. So help celebrate his birthday by having a hearty breakfast!

Operating Sessions on Tom Enloe’s Pacific Northwestern Railroad

Bob Stafford, Cliff Green

Tom Enloe is inviting anyone interested in operations to contact him to attend an operating session on his HO scale Pacific Northwestern Railroad. The PNW is a standard gauge railroad that fills a 28 ft by 42 ft room. The theme is a railroad operating from a Pacific Ocean seaport across a mountain range connecting with major railroads in the east. The railroad has extensive staging yards representing these connections. The layout has multiple yards, a seaport, large passenger station complex, and a 2% crossing of a mountain grade, all connected with a 400 foot long main line. The PNW connects with the Cherry Valley Railroad, a typical Pacific Northwest logging short line which is still under construction. Operation of the railroad is by timetable and train order.

Operating sessions are typically held on the second Saturday of each month. Sessions can be held with as few as eight operators or as many as sixteen, and twelve to fourteen is optimal.

Please contact Tom to be added to his e-mail list (which is his primary method of coordinating upcoming sessions) and for his street address. Tom can be contacted by e-mail at TomEnloe@aol.com or by phone at 425-788-1291.

OLY-OPS 2014 Scheduled for Oct. 18

Gregory Wright

Want to operate on two great layouts? OLY-OPS 2014 has a few spots left for operators, but sign up now!

Our 8th OLY-OPS will feature 6 or 7 great operating layouts on Saturday, October 18, 2014.

Confirmed participants must be in Olympia by 8:15 a.m. to pick up their layout assignments and will spend the whole day. You will operate on one railroad in the morning and a second in the afternoon. And you will be invited to an after-event dinner. The only charge is minimal: bring food or cash for our local food bank.

Register now! It’s first come, first served. Email Gregory Wright with  your  name  and  the  names anyone  else  you  are  registering  for  in  your  carpool. Please  limit  each  car  to  4 persons. Please provide only  confirmed participants. (No-shows destroy our schedule and block others from attending.) Tell Greg if you have special concerns like you can’t do steps or tall layouts. This year we will not provide maps. If you don’t have GPS, make a special request in your email.

Check out our videos for either Windows or Mac or Android

OLY-OPS is brought to you by the Olympia Open House and Operations Group, O.O. & O. G. And don’t miss our Spring OLY-TOURS, when we’ll have 10 or more area layouts open to visit.

Want to Learn Timetable and Train Order Ops?

Tom Enloe

Tom Enloe has been running Time Table and Train Order operating sessions for over eight years on his Pacific Northwestern layout. During this time, the PNW has hosted sessions on the 2nd Saturday monthly where operators from all around the PNR Fourth Division have gathered to enjoy an afternoon of fun, putting the layout through its paces. The PNW has hosted ops sessions for the PNR Cascadian International 2010 regional convention and operators from around the country for Soundrail 2012 and Soundrail 2014. It is planned to operate as part of the Portland 2015 NMRA national convention.

Recent completion of the Cherry Valley timber and mining line, and the relocation of a couple of regular operators, have created opportunities for new operators to join the current crew. A crew of 18 is needed to fully exercise the railroad. With that in mind, Tom is soliciting new operators to be added to the call list for ops sessions.

Come and Learn! Tom and his regular crew have always placed a strong emphasis on teaching and coaching folks in the various facets of operation, in particular, Timetable and Train Order. To this end, Tom and his crew have created three trainee positions for those with no TT&TO experience, or who aren’t yet comfortable with their operating skills. Trainees will be accompanied by an assigned coach during their first session(s) to coach them on TT&TO and the PNW itself.

If you are interested or have questions, contact Tom at 425-788-1291, TomEnloe@Aol.com or Steve Haas at 425-441-8541, Steve.Haas@comcast.net.

 

OLY-OPS Open to 4D Members

Scott Buckley

There are a few openings available for OLY-OPS 2013, to be held Saturday, October 12th. If you’d like want to operate on some of the finest layouts in the 4th Division, sign up now!

Email Gregory Wright your name and the names of friends who will carpool with you. Tell him if you have special needs, such as “can’t do steps” or “no crawl-unders.”

Participants must be in Olympia by 8:15 A.M. and will operate on one layout in the morning and another layout in the afternoon. Everyone is invited to the no-host dinner following.

Please request a spot only if you are sure you can attend. No-shows destroy our schedule and eliminate those who could have attended.

It’s Not How Big!

Jim Sabol / Photos by the author

If all your trains do is run around in a circle, a layout the size of an airplane hangar will soon leave you bored and looking for another hobby. But if you emulate Brian Ferris and convert even a modest-sized room into an actual railroad (just smaller), you will have a hobby for a lifetime of interest and enjoyment.

Superintendent Brian Ferris, seated, orients Greg Wright to the Dispatcher's job and tools

Superintendent Brian Ferris, seated, orients Greg Wright to the Dispatcher’s job and tools

 

Brian’s HO Port Townsend Southern, Third Subdivision, occupies a spare room about 12’x20′ in the Ferris home in Olympia. The PTS is point-to-point (no loop) 54.7 theoretical miles from Centralia to Tacoma, with branches to Union Mills and Maytown, all in Western Washington.

The busy engine terminal and classification yard are designed to receive, classify, block, and dispatch an efficient flow of freight traffic over the road

The busy engine terminal and classification yard are designed to receive, classify, block, and dispatch an efficient flow of freight traffic over the road

 

Recently, a road superintendent, a dispatcher, a pair of yardmasters, three teams of engineer/conductors, and two station agent/operators combined to move three first class passenger trains, a second class freight, plus eight extra trains and a logger over the main and branches, originating like magic through a hole in the wall leading to staging tracks in the adjacent garage that represented the terminals at Centralia and Tacoma.

As with big brothers NP, UP, GN, and Milw—whose trains regularly use PTS rails as a bridge line–emphasis is strongest on safety for employees and passengers, reliable on-time performance for customers, and meticulous care for company equipment and infrastructure. First time operator Tom Murphy said, “I had no idea that operating a model railroad as much as possible like a full-sized railroad could occupy a person for four hours with no sign of boredom!”

             Operators’ Duties on the PTSRR, 3rd Sub

Superintendent
  1. Create master timetable
  2. Monitor progress of all trains and safe operation of subdivision
Dispatcher
  1. Monitor safe and on-time movement of all trains in subdivision per timetable
  2. Record movement of all trains in subdivision
  3. Authorize agent/operators to issue clearance cards for all scheduled and extra trains
  4. Authorize extra trains
  5. Authorize #19 orders (for special movements) of trains
Yardmasters Robert Grove and Charles Ricketts break down arriving freight #674 prior to blocking southbound local #703 for Engineer Jim Elder

Yardmasters Robert Grove and Charles Ricketts break down arriving freight #674 prior to blocking southbound local #703 for Engineer Jim Elder

Yardmasters
  1. Prepare yard to receive arriving freight trains.
  2. Classify and block arriving cars for forwarding on departing freight trains
  3. Manage safe and efficient operation of arriving, departing, and switching locomotives within yard limits
Station agent Greg Arndt issues a clearance form to Mike Davison, conductor of Train #1905

Station agent Greg Arndt issues a clearance form to Mike Davison, conductor of Train #1905

Station Agent/Operators
  1. Issue clearance cards for all scheduled departing trains on confirmation from dispatcher
  2. Issue #19 orders as instructed by dispatcher
  3. Register names of crew and train numbers for all arriving and departing trains
  4. Advise dispatcher of all arrivals and departures
Conductors Mike Davison, Scott Buckley, and Ry Bates (with order sheets) go over schedules with yardmasters Robert Grove and Chuck Ricketts

Conductors Mike Davison, Scott Buckley, and Ry Bates (with order sheets) go over schedules with yardmasters Robert Grove and Chuck Ricketts

Conductors
  1. Verify wheel report (number and identity of all cars in train)
  2. Obtain clearance card from stations agent/operator, confer with engineer
  3. Plan any switching moves with engineer
  4. Monitor on-time and safe operation of train at all points at all times
  5. Protect train from all directions in case of failure to maintain schedule
  6. Advise dispatcher immediately upon failure to maintain schedule.
Engineers
  1. Verify readiness of motive power assigned to train
  2. Confer with conductor regarding correct current time, timetable, and authority to proceed
  3. Confer with conductor on all switching moves
  4. Conduct sanding brake test (operation of DCC throttle)
  5. Conduct running brake test (verify all cars coupled, DCC brake)
  6. Operate train over the road safely per timetable, speed limits, and special orders
Station Agent Greg Arndt coordinates throttle settings with engineers Jim Elder, Allan Manson, Clint Brown, and Tom Murphy

Station Agent Greg Arndt coordinates throttle settings with engineers Jim Elder, Allan Manson, Clint Brown, and Tom Murphy

Station agent Arndt issues a Form 19 order authorizing Scott Buckley's extra train to meet and pass an opposing extra by virtue of superiority of direction (northbound per company rules) while Enforcer Chuck Ricketts looks on.

Station agent Arndt issues a Form 19 order authorizing Scott Buckley’s extra train to meet and pass an opposing extra by virtue of superiority of direction (northbound per company rules) while Enforcer Chuck Ricketts looks on.

 

Conductor Clint Brown coordinates heavy switching moves at Union Mills with engineer Scott Buckley. Both boys play nice together which is good . because the mill here is a major shipper on the Port Townsend Southern.

Conductor Clint Brown coordinates heavy switching moves at Union Mills with engineer Scott Buckley. Both boys play nice together which is good . because the mill here is a major shipper on the Port Townsend Southern.

 

It's not all work! Conductor-Engineer team Ry Bates and Tom Murphy enjoy a seat and a cold one between runs

It’s not all work! Conductor-Engineer team Ry Bates and Tom Murphy enjoy a seat and a cold one between runs

Operating on the Sherwood, Shelton, and Sarazen

Jim Sabol / Photos by Dave Faussett and Jim Sabol

“How happy were they, Jimmy?”
“Happier than a model railroader, operating on a DCC layout, with a fresh set of batteries, a smooth locomotive, and a clear board from the dispatcher!”

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Layout owner Chuck Ricketts explains DCC controller to first time operator Dave Faussett

About once a month, a group of about ten guys, modelers in scales from N to 3/8,” gather at Chuck Ricketts’s home in Lacey to operate the Northwest-themed Sherwood, Shelton, and Sarazen Railroad in On30 scale.

At a typical four-hour Saturday afternoon session, the gang observes a twenty-four hour fast clock to run two first class passenger trains northbound (a.m.) and two southbound (p.m.), two through freights north and two south, a logger, a harbor local, and five or six extras. Yardmasters at Shelton and Oyster Bay drive their switch engines hard but prototypically to construct and deconstruct departing and arriving traffic, giving priority to livestock, perishables, and non-time-sensitive ladings.

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Jim Sabol works the dispatcher’s desk with timetable and fast clock

Station stops by the fast passenger trains are brisk but adequate for customers to board and disembark safely. All activity is charted and facilitated by a dispatcher with a timetable, lots of coffee, a sharp pencil, an OS sheet, and phone communication with station agents (who double as passing engineers OS’ing their arrival at each station). The dispatcher remotely operates working order boards at each station to confirm a train’s authority to proceed to the next control point, where the engineer again OS’s his progress.

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Layout owner Chuck Ricketts assigns duty to Yardmaster Greg Wright at Oyster Bay

The SS&S is no plywood central. Operators run their trains through beautifully executed scenery and backdrops, and a multitude of mostly scratchbuilt, appropriately dated and located stations, tipples, liveries, quarries, sawmills, water towers, docks, and warehouses. No matter what scale a person models at home, after ten minutes operating on the SS&S, a visitor feels as if On30 is the perfect scale—at least for today.

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Jim Elder checks out several of many structures he scratchbuilt for the wharf on the SS&S

Frequent operators on the SS&S include Scott Buckley, Ted Curphey, Mike Davidson, Josh Delp, Brian Ferris,  Scott Groff, Robert Grove, Ryan Bates, Charles Lundberg, Allan Manson, Roger Nulton, Sue Ritter, Jim Sabol, Marvin Schurke, Robert Scott, Doug Walters, Larry Williams, and Greg Wright, assisted by first time operators Lee Bishop, Dave Faussett, and John Phillips. Layout co-builders, maintainers, and troubleshooters include Jerry Barnes, Jim Elder, and Jerry Julian.

click to enlarge

The busy Sherwood sawmill was designed by Chuck Ricketts, scratchbuilt by Chuck and Jim Elder, with machinery built by Bob Staley

Chuck Ricketts’ Sherwood, Shelton, and Sarazen will be open to visitors on March 2 from 11:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. as part of the annual Olympia Layout Tours.

IHX-2013 Layout Tours & Op Sessions

Bob Osborn

IHX-2013 has a great lineup of model railroad layouts for touring and operations. We currently have nearly 50 layouts lined up, in scales from N to G.

We will have all the famous local layouts published in the model railroad press open for your viewing. Plus, we will have many new layouts never before open for touring.

Model railroads that you love to visit – like Jack Burgess’ famous Yosemite Valley Railroad, Jim Diaz’s Western Pacific Railroad, Otis McGee’s Southern Pacific and Dave Parks’ Western Maryland/B&O will reopen. New layouts include Mike Coen’s Western Pacific Oregon Division and the Carquinez Model Railroad Club layout. There will be layouts in all scales and for all interests.

As usual, at least a dozen layouts will open for operating sessions. Operators of all levels are welcome, from the first-timers to experienced. Everyone is invited to operate. If you’re new to operations, there will be mentors available.

There will be model railroad layouts in various stages of completion, to provide you with great ideas. Sign up today at http://www.pcrnmra.org/conv2013. See you at IHX-2013!

OLY-OPS is looking for a few good…

Scott Buckley

… operators!

There are a few spots still available for OLY-OPS 2012, to be held Saturday, November 3. If you’d like want to operate on some of the finest layouts in the 4th Division, sign up now!

Email your name and anyone else who will carpool with you to Gregory Wright. Tell him if you have special needs such as “can’t do steps” or “no crawl-unders.”

Participants must be in Olympia by 8:15 a.m and will operate on one layout in the morning and another in the afternoon. Everyone is also invited to a no-host dinner following.

Only request a spot if you are sure you can attend. No-shows destroy our schedule and eliminate those who could have attended.

Seahawks Derail Cherry Valley RR

Tom Enloe

Due to the completely unexpected, unanticipated, surprising, astounding upset appearance by the Seattle Chickens Seahawks in a playoff game this Saturday, January 8, and the unexplainable urge of certain key operators of the Cherry Valley RR to witness the carnage as it happens(!), this weekend’s op session has been cancelled. Next session February 12.