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Window Display Layout As an example of realistic modeling, this layout was not a contender by any stretch of the imagination, but as a hobby shop display, it was a winner. It had a number of features that would catch the eye of passers-by, particularly a convoluted track plan that would keep kids (and even some adults) guessing where the train would emerge next. The rugged scenery featured a waterfall and lots of roads populated by Märklin's early solid rubber automobiles.
Although it had no name, the railroad did have an agenda: to ship spring water in tank cars from a mountain spring (1) to a bottling plant (2). The only other structures were the enginehouse (3) and two passenger stations (4 and 5). All of the structures were scratchbuilt, and except for the long bridge at the top of the plan (6), which was Märklin's arched steel truss, all of the bridges were scratchbuilt as well. Scenery was quite strange: I decided to try using Plasticine (a modeling clay that never hardens), which I applied in a roughly half-inch-thick layer over a cardstock support structure. While it did offer some unique advantages—for instance, I could simulate stone by pressing a small screwdriver into the clay, and plant trees as quickly as I could pop them into the landscape—Plasticine had as many negative qualities, including excessive weight and an objectionable odor. It was, nevertheless, an interesting experiment. Another experiment was a way to ballast the track without applying loose material or glue
onto the track, which I was certain would cause problems, especially for Märklin's delicate
turnouts. Back then, Arnold Rapido used to sell a ballast-like material made from ground
cork. I painted the cookie-cutter Homasote roadbed with thick dark gray acrylic paint,
The layout could be powered either by household current (using a doorbell transformer), or by a 6-volt lantern battery, and a miniature tethered handheld unit controlled everything, including the throttle, lights and turnouts. For those with an extensive collection of old Model Railroader magazines, you can see photos and read "A World in My Lap," an article I wrote about this layout, in the October 1975 issue. Copyright © 2007-2008 by David K. Smith. All Rights Reserved. |