Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Model railway on a door

Layout on a doorEvery so often, someone talks to me at a show and says something along the lines of "I don't understand why you people don't built your layouts on doors. They would be excellent.". They usually expound on the idea telling me that second hand doors are cheap, ready made and wooden. Apparently all these are desirable attributes for a model railway baseboard.

My reply usually involves pointing out that as far as I am concerned, plywood is much better. Doors are heavy, thick enough to make fitting point motors impossible, have no where to hide the wiring and most importantly, not made of wood. Unless you consider two skins of hardboard separated with pine spacers to be wood. Real wood doors tend to be paneled and thus provide a truly rubbish base for track what unless you want to base your model on a particularly dull roller coaster or perhaps the Docklands Light Railway. Oh and because they are door sized, difficult to get through normal doorways.

Apart from that they are perfect.

Not to be detered, Keith Bristow has made a railway on a door. It's quite nice too with a continuous run track plan - admitedly this requires very tight curves - and sidings and loops just like a proper train set. There's quite a bit of scenery and a couple of buildings. That bus should be on a bridge really (it's a model railway tradition) but if you were looking for something for your kids, it's got a lot going for it. I'd have been quite happy with it when I was a kid. You can run trains around and shunt, more than the majority of proper, grown-up model railway layouts can offer !

4 comments:

Chris Ford said...

The door foundation aside, there are not enough of these around. The oval with sidings still has a lot going for it and for pure fun beats endless shuffling back and forth anyday.

Anonymous said...

Doesn't do anything for me.

Adrian Tritschler said...

You could always build a mountain rack-railway on a door, in a doorway. Some sort of interesting vertical points and a zig-zag up the face of the door. Now there's a challenge for you...

Paul said...

Nicely done, thanks for sharing. My woodwork skills are rather limited so using a door has a certain appeal... It shows that you don't necessarily need specialist equipment (woodworking things) to build a model railway.