Posts Tagged ‘model train table’


Model Train Table


Is this where you plan to put your model train layout?  That looks pretty good but did you say it floods a bit in here when in Winter.  Yeah that’s the drawback, isn’t it?  People have lots of diverse locations that they place their hobby trains and each has its different benefits and problems.  Let’s think this through a bit:

 

Just throw it on the floor like your laundry in college:  

The lazy solution is to just leave it on the ground.  This preserves the time and trouble of getting or making a hobby table, but it is not very good for tinier locomotives.  Bending over and kneeling down do not make for the best hobbying experiences for adults.  The bird’s eye view of the tinier gauges foregrounds the weaknesses of theses locomotives.  It also addes to the chances of taking unexpected slips when you accidentally step on your trains.  You really need a display hobby locomotive surface for the HO and smaller variety locomotives.  Even O locomotives look better on a train table.

Pre-existing shelves, the fortunate lazy man’s option  

If you’re really fortunate there is a location in your house that is already elevated and large enough that it can play a dual role as display area.  This natural shelf answers the problem of line of sight perhaps and if you are extremely fortunate can find the perfect place for our toy trains.  This is certainly better than putting your locomotives on the carpet for the visual aspect of things.  You might try to fool yourself into believing that you have found the perfect spot but think of the problem aspects of this arrangement.  These spaces tend to be too small for a hobby train layout and they tend not to be configured in the right way.  So, such spots dictate a host of limitations to your toy training.  This is never a good way to grow your model train empire.

Another fortunate possibility is that you happen to have a spare area just lying around somewhere:  

Some hobby trainers just use an old table they had lying around unused.  This helps in that you can carry it to the spot you would like, but the majority of tables that are not specifically built for toy training have other problems.  Not only are many such tables wobbly, but you still have to adjust your train display to fit with the pre-existing measurements of your area rather than the other way around.

A table that screams “I’m cheap but I know the value of hard work crafting”:  

For the make-it-from-scratch crowd, nothing is better than creating and building a display area themselves.  It is incredibly satisfying to design a table that exactly matches the precise requirements of our track plan.  You can also really give your locomotive surface some unique personality in this manner.  This isn’t for everyone.  If you aren’t that into making furniture then you’ll want to avoid trying this.  Just as large of a drawback is the fact that such tables tend to be permanently one size and as your hobby training empire expands you have to go through the trouble of building yet another surface to increase your surface area.  Also, if you are pressed for time, this will really add a substantial amount of time that you have to spend getting ready before you even start your actual model locomotiveing.  I won’t put down homemade tables except to say that if your engineering talents don’t extend beyond model locomotives, trying to build a surface can really be a black hole of time and effort that you may not have much to show for on the other side.

Hobby tables, the option if for those who are willing to shell out the clams:

There are these special kind of hobby table that is just perfect for hobby locomotiveing.  They are called “domino” tables because that can be connected on any side to form any shape, no matter how idiosyncratic the shape.  The tables also can be adjusted to sit at more than one height so that you can customize it to the specifics of the surroundings you’ll be displaying your locomotive setup in.  They let you realize your mental plan as you saw it.  Also, because they are lightweight they can more easily be moved out of the way and since they can easily be changed and added to as you see fit, they can grow with your model training ambitions.  You can also more easily transport your table if you want to show your design around.  For this reason, these areas are really the best decision for toy locomotive displays.

 

With your area decision out of the way you are now free to really embark on your hobby locomotive adventure.  Good lucky and happy hobbying!   

Here is more information on Model Train Track. Here is a website with a free mini-course dedicated to Model Trains

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N Scale Model Railroad Table

Here’s an aspect of model training we haven’t thought enough about, the surface where we’re setting up our trains. Even with N gauge this can be important. You could simply put these trains on a regular surface, you say. Wait a sec.  Let me try to argue my point. The kind of table you choose your N scale locomotives on can actually be very significant.  Here are some reasons why:

A unbalanced surface can’t handle it:

To begin, you don’t want to choose a surface that is weak and that will lean or that can be easily bumped over. You don’t need your trains to stay upright against a the “Big One” but they shouldn’t fall over when the school bus shakes by outside. One horrible moment and your locomotives could be in fragments tossed about the ground. Imagine the possible cost and the time you just trashed! Don’t open yourself up to this setback.  If you’re practiced with your hardware you could fashion this train table yourself.

Cool Tip: Here’s a cool suggestion. Remember that unused ping-pong table that lays forgotten in the basement? Sure you do, it’s the ping pong table that became your new model train table. Ping pong tables are nice and big so they free lots of options for your design.  Think of how complicated you could make your HO track plan on a table of these measurements.  Even if you have a Lionel O or one of those new S gauge trains, you’ll find that you can really do a lot with a table this big.

Portable tables for travel:

Look to shell out a bit for a strong train table. A quick web search will list a gaggle of leads focused on train tables.

Cool suggestion #2: Here’s a room saver: Lower your table from the ceiling.  Want your car port back for your cars?   Attach your table to the ceiling with a pulley device and your problem is overcome.

Interlocking tables:

The best bet when it comes to tables, though, is domino style tables that can be used in any configuration. These tables usually come in 2’ x 4’ cuts that can be fastened in any direction so that you can make really long pieces by connecting the thin sides or you can make wider tables by connecting the 4’ to 4’ sides.  What these great domino tables let you to do most however is to grow your train layout in any way that you would like.  Unlike other types of tables that force you to change your design to match their dimensions, these tables allow you to control the limits of your layout. The light weight design is ideal for model train lovers.  If you want to take your model train down in the basement, you can just carry the table down to your work area.  If you want to take this over to your brother’s house to show his kids your track, it is light enough to be hauled.  They are so easy to reconfigure that you might actually have difficulty keeping to one track plan.

And these tables can grow with your model training experience letting you expand your surface setup along with your developing toy railroad layout.

Here is more information on N Scale Model Trains. Here is a website with a free mini-course dedicated to Model Trains.


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