Industry number 2 for my Freeport Industrial Center layout is Weyerhaeuser Paper Products. This represents an industry that was actually located a couple of miles farther west on the line but it is one I have always been interested in. Weyerhaeuser receives a lot of traffic, several carloads of paper, each week. This is enough to justify switching this industry on almost every operating session.
The building is comprised of two Walthers Modern Concrete Warehouse Background Building kits. This allowed me to build a building that is 33.5" long and about 2" deep. The footprint of the industry will end up being about 42" wide when it's all done. The dock is made from one set of Pikestuff Modular Loading Dock kit. The dock is not yet attached to the building but will be once the site has been properly leveled. I added a few roof details from the Walthers Roof Details kit. This is a must as the background building kits have no roof details at all. There are other similar industries in the Phoenix area and it seems to be common practice to store extra paper rolls outside. These rolls are huge and I will add a few next to the building once I decide on a modeling method.
I am fascinated about how this hobby is not only about modeling but operating rolling stock to simulate real world operations.
ReplyDeleteThat being said I think I know what a leading point switch is (cars come into the split side instead of from the single side?) but what is a runaround?
A runaround is simply the moving of the locomotive from one end of the train to the other. This requires and runaround track. This track arrangement is a little more common on models than the real railroads. The real railroads would switch industries, whenever possible, from trains moving in the appropriate direction, minimizing this type of movement.
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