new elevated railway
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new elevated railway
I spent the weekend to build the elevated railway. The original bedding was built on wood; after 5 years, they got rotted, and honestly speaking by that time, I was not knowledgeable enough to build a good bedding for the tracks. This new one is made of all PVC material, the tracks were recycled from the old system, which used R1 tracks, for small trains only. I just tested the train today, so far so good, and I am still trying to figure out how to level them; specifically, a grade at a tight curve makes a bad combination. It is not simple though even I have a lever. Any idea please let me know.
https://gardenrails.org/forum/download/ ... ew&id=3578
https://gardenrails.org/forum/download/ ... ew&id=3578
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Re: new elevated railway
Interesting idea. Not sure about the levelling issue. Are the the legs telescopic - ie does one section fit inside another? If so, that could give you a method for adjusting the height.
Rik
Rik
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Re: new elevated railway
Rik,
I learned this construction technique from Ron Karlsson. Yes, the legs are telescopic, I can adjust the height by raising up or down. I guess, the leveling process needs two persons and we have to undo several legs at one time. It's challenging for a one-person job. Probably, I will call my daughter out for a hand.
Re: new elevated railway
Looks like it's a case of a long spirit level. I'd have thought though, that it's a case of adjusting one leg at a time. Once you've decided which post is your datum, you need only adjust one leg at a time starting from that one. If your spirit level is accurate, by the time you get back round to the first leg, all the posts should be level.mymodeltrain wrote: ↑Tue May 15, 2018 1:10 pmRik,
I learned this construction technique from Ron Karlsson. Yes, the legs are telescopic, I can adjust the height by raising up or down. I guess, the leveling process needs two persons and we have to undo several legs at one time. It's challenging for a one-person job. Probably, I will call my daughter out for a hand.
Rik
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Re: new elevated railway
After all I don't need a lever, instead, I observed the train speed and adjust the post where its speed is reduced; overall not very scientific but it works.ge_rik wrote: ↑Tue May 15, 2018 6:35 pmLooks like it's a case of a long spirit level. I'd have thought though, that it's a case of adjusting one leg at a time. Once you've decided which post is your datum, you need only adjust one leg at a time starting from that one. If your spirit level is accurate, by the time you get back round to the first leg, all the posts should be level.mymodeltrain wrote: ↑Tue May 15, 2018 1:10 pmRik,
I learned this construction technique from Ron Karlsson. Yes, the legs are telescopic, I can adjust the height by raising up or down. I guess, the leveling process needs two persons and we have to undo several legs at one time. It's challenging for a one-person job. Probably, I will call my daughter out for a hand.
Rik
Re: new elevated railway
If it works that great news, but I like Rik would put a spirit level on the track just to make sure. Also it would be an idea to put it widthways across the track, as you may find it could be curving out or in, both a recipe for falling off. At the height it is, it wouldn’t be any good for your locos…
Re: new elevated railway
Looks good to me
Well done.

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Re: new elevated railway
Thanks for suggestion; It's still not perfectly level yet; I still observe and adjust here and there but thanks for the suggestion of curving in/out; in fact, the cars fell off a few times because of that; it's painful for that height.FWLR wrote: ↑Thu May 31, 2018 7:35 amIf it works that great news, but I like Rik would put a spirit level on the track just to make sure. Also it would be an idea to put it widthways across the track, as you may find it could be curving out or in, both a recipe for falling off. At the height it is, it wouldn’t be any good for your locos…
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Re: new elevated railway
Yes, it is much more better than the previous construct; this system is robust, easy to build and stable. I don't have to worry about rotten wood issues as we have so much rain in here in Nashville; everyday can be a raining day. After 5 years, every wood construct is done; it doesn't matter how much we try to re-paint/touchup yearly. My preference now is no more wood structures in the garden railway, it must be either plastic, pvc, acrylic or cement.
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Re: new elevated railway
Here is the first movie of the elevate railway, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1gnb2Se ... e=youtu.bemymodeltrain wrote: ↑Tue May 15, 2018 3:02 amI spent the weekend to build the elevated railway. The original bedding was built on wood; after 5 years, they got rotted, and honestly speaking by that time, I was not knowledgeable enough to build a good bedding for the tracks. This new one is made of all PVC material, the tracks were recycled from the old system, which used R1 tracks, for small trains only. I just tested the train today, so far so good, and I am still trying to figure out how to level them; specifically, a grade at a tight curve makes a bad combination. It is not simple though even I have a lever. Any idea please let me know.
https://gardenrails.org/forum/download/ ... ew&id=3578
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Re: new elevated railway
mymodeltrain wrote: ↑Mon Jun 11, 2018 2:07 pmHere is the first movie of the elevated railway, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1gnb2Se ... e=youtu.bemymodeltrain wrote: ↑Tue May 15, 2018 3:02 amI spent the weekend to build the elevated railway. The original bedding was built on wood; after 5 years, they got rotted, and honestly speaking by that time, I was not knowledgeable enough to build a good bedding for the tracks. This new one is made of all PVC material, the tracks were recycled from the old system, which used R1 tracks, for small trains only. I just tested the train today, so far so good, and I am still trying to figure out how to level them; specifically, a grade at a tight curve makes a bad combination. It is not simple though even I have a lever. Any idea please let me know.
https://gardenrails.org/forum/download/ ... ew&id=3578
Re: new elevated railway
That raised section is a nice piece of work, the Stainz was running quite smoothly so it looks like your track is fairly level.Nice to watch, thanks.
Re: new elevated railway
Looks like you've evened out the dips and bumps. I like that pub building.
Rik
Rik
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Re: new elevated railway
Thanks, it is indeed very fun to watch the train running on the new construct every evening. Sometimes, I look back and surprised that I could do that much with little amount of time.
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