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![]() Sheraton
Reston Hotel, October 16 - 19, 2008
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| Thursday
Evening 6 PM to 9 PM |
| Cumberland
Shenandoah & Piedmont |
Laurel,
MD |
TH2 |
| B&
O RR - West End Subdivision |
Columbia,
MD |
TH1 |
| O'Ryan
& Webb Railway |
Bowie,
MD |
TH3 |
| Friday
Afternoon 1 PM to 4PM |
| Piermont
Division |
Columbia,
MD |
FA1 |
| LIRR - Port
Jefferson Branch |
Poolesville,
MD |
FA6 |
| Asbury Park
Railroad Club |
Gaithersburg,
MD |
FA3 |
| Penn Creek
Valley |
Gaithersburg,
MD |
FA4 |
| RO
& S |
Laytonsville,
MD |
FA5 |
| CSX East Rail |
Silver
Spring, MD |
FA2 |
| Friday Evening 6 PM to 9
PM Northern Virginia
Tour |
| Berkshire
Airline Railroad Company |
McLean,
VA |
FEV1 |
| Continental
United States (CONUS) Lines |
Burke,
VA |
FEV3 |
| Western North
Carolina RR (Northern Virginia Model Railroaders) |
Vienna,
VA |
FEV5 |
| Pennsylvania Electric Division | Burke,
VA |
FEV4 |
| Day &
Dean Railroad |
Potomac
Falls,
VA |
FEV2 |
| Friday
Evening 6 PM to 9
PM Severna
Park and
Waldorf Tour |
| Erie
Lackawanna - Scranton Division |
Severna
Park, MD |
FESP1 |
| Franklin, Somerset & Kennebec Railway | Severna
Park, MD |
FESP2 |
| Chesapeake and Allegheny Railroad |
Severna
Park, MD |
FESP3 |
| Piedmont
Southern Railroad (until 10 PM) |
Waldorf,
MD |
FESP4 |
| Saturday
Afternoon
1 PM to 4 PM |
| Swiss
Gotthard Line |
Alexandria,
VA |
SA1 |
| "The Rathole" |
Mc
Lean, VA |
SA2 |
| Virginia
and
Western |
Falls
Church, VA |
SA3 |
| Sunday
- Going Home |
| Kristenville
& Mitchelville Railroad N on I-95 |
Bel
Air, MD |
SU2 |
| Sylvania
Central Railroad N on I-95 |
Bel
Air, MD |
SU1 |
| Prince
William Model Railroad Club S on I-95 |
Quantico,
VA |
SU3 |
| Cumberland
Valley Railroad |
Annandale,
VA |
SU6 |
| Clear Creek and Caldswell Mining and Railway Company |
Baltimore,
MD |
SU4 |
| Oregon
Coast Railroad |
Gainesville,
VA |
SU7 |
Asbury
Park Railroad Club
When
Ken Jones moved into the Asbury Methodist Village retirement
community, he donated his model railroad and the community provided a
room to
house it. The layout is so popular that
Ken runs different trains each month to keep up the viewing variety.
The layout is fully sceniced, DC, freelanced
to represent this locale. Ken runs
contemporary MARK and AMTRAK passenger trains along with nostalgic
classics
such as the Twentieth Century Limited, and the Santa Fe Dayliner.
You might see a Tropicana Juice train or
contemporary modular freights. With 250
cars, 150 people, and a ton of automobiles, you'll have to be sharp to
see the
policeman who pulled over the blonde in the convertible and the Good
Humor truck. There's an operating scrap yard, partially
filled with left-overs from years of white elephant sales. Some
traffic lights change and there are 55
illuminated buildings that support night-time operations.
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B&O
RR - West End Subdivision
S scale layout
(code 100
track) representing B&O between Keyser, WV and Grafton, WV in the
mid-1960s. Mainline is basically a double-track loop, but is
operated point-to-point with trains originating/terminating in several
hidden yards on layout. Car card operation and Digitrax
DCC. Benchwork, trackwork, and wiring are 91% complete.
Backdrop and scenery are about 40% complete and structure are about 20%
complete. Scenery features foam insulation carved to represent
both cut stone (portals and viaducts) and sedimentary rock.
Sectional benchwork.
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The
Berkshire Air Line Railroad Company
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| Chesapeake
and Allegheny Railroad The Severna Park Model Railroad Club has constructed a railroad named The Chesapeake and Allegheny Railroad. It portrays Maryland in Miniature and its logo states "C&A, FROM THE MOUNTAINS TO THE BAY". The track plan may be viewed as a folded dog-bone with a stub end terminal, a division point and a mountain branch line. The railroad is constructed using open grid L-beam construction as well as table top construction, where each lends itself to being most useful. The roadbed is Homosote over plywood to obtain strength and quiet operation. The track is laid on hand laid ties. Code 100 rail is used on the mainline and code 70 rail is used in the mountain. All switches have been scratch built including some custom designed switches at Potomac Junction and Middleton. Scenery has been built using hardshell and zip texture techniques. Almost all of the structures have been scratch built including most of the bridges on the railroad.
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Clear
Creek and Caldswell Mining and Railway Company
Control is Digitrax radio DCC, and track is Peco code 55, with 20" minimum radius and all curves "eased". 90% of scenery is completed to the "basic" level (detailing to come), with towns at "mock-up" stage. A car-card system, which I adapted from several different systems available, is used for freight car forwarding, and I follow a "sequence timetable" (no "fast clock") with track warrants. The layout is designed for prototypical steam-era branchline way-freight switching of on-line industries, and relatively short 14 car trains. Yet with a mainline over a mile in length and a continuous run connection, there is plenty of "railfan" running available when the mood strikes. |
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Continental
United States (CONUS) Lines
Continental United
States Lines, "CONUS Lines", is an O Scale, Hi-Rail layout reflecting
dramatic changes in this part of the hobby of model railroading over
the last two decades. Multiple long trains representing the various
geographic regions that Rick has lived in during a 26-year Navy career
traverses a continuous run 158 foot double track mainline featuring
2.3% mountain grades cresting at the mountain hamlet of Armstrong.
Point-to-point and out-an-back operations on a lengthy branchline are
also feasible on a layout plan "Big Trains You Can Live With",
developed by John Armstrong in the 1980s. A member of Rick's O Scale
Group gave him the plan three years ago suggesting that John's drawings
closely matched his available basement space; the current layout
reflects about 80% of John's thinking. For the MER Convention visit,
Rick will be running trains from the Pocahontas Region, specifically
N&W, VGN, C&O, B&O, and WM, during the steam-to-diesel
transition period. Motive power will be MTH, with DCS control allowing
multiple walkaround operations. The current layout's predecessor, also
named CONUS Lines, was a modular layout that survived 11 cross-country
moves while Rick was on active duty, and has been featured in multiple
issues of Classic Toy Trains magazine since its debut in the November
2000 issue.
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CSX
East Rail
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Cumberland
Shenandoah & Piedmont
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Cumberland
Valley Railroad - Richmond Furnace
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Day
& Dean Railroad and Allisonville Short Line
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Erie
Lackawanna-Scranton Division
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Franklin,Somerset & Kennebec Railway
Equipment on the railroad is a mixture of SR&RL and WW&F prototypes, with some FS&K. Some locomotives are equipped with PFM sound. The structures are a combination of kit and scratch-built, with many copied from Maine prototypes. A 30' long portable display layout depicting Rangeley, Maine on the SR&RL circa 1915 will also be on display. |
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Kristenville and Michelleville Railroad
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Long
Island Railroad - Port Jefferson Branch
The layout models
the Port Jefferson Branch of the Long Island Railroad from Port
Jefferson to Jamaica and then from Jamaica under the East River and
into the underground LIRR platforms at Penn Station. The time is 1964,
when the World's Fair was going on in Flushing Meadow and Barry
Goldwater was running against Lyndon Johnson. The suburbs of Long
Island's North Shore are modeled, as commuter trains carry commuters
from the suburbs into Jamaica. Passengers would then "change at
Jamaica" from the diesel hauled trains onto 3rd rail electric trains
that would carry them through the East River tunnel into Manhattan. The
hustle and bustle of Penn Station (including the underground LIRR
platforms), and Manhattan are modeled, including an operating overhead
El. The layout was started in 1988 and was the featured layout in the
September 1997 issue of Railmodel Journal. All of the engines and
passenger cars are correct models of the equipment run on the LIRR
during the mid 1960s. Operation is with Digitrax DCC and all of the
engines are sound equipped.
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Oregon
Coast Railroad
The Oregon Coast
Railroad is a fictional transition era (Fall 1953) layout. Area modeled
follows the Columbia River from Portland to Astoria and then south
along the Pacific Coast to Tillamook. Modeled items include an ocean
port with a tramp steamer and car float, a large yard and engine
facility, a small river fishing town and a large lumber mill. Buildings
are craftsman kits or scratchbuilt. Scenery is more than 50% complete.
Radio Digitrax is used for the command system to allow walk-around
operations. The layout is designed for operations as well as scenic
effects. Operating sessions can accommodate 8-12 people using TT &
TO.
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O'Ryan
& Webb Railway
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The
Penn Creek Valley
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Pennsylvania Electric Division
The track plan features 54" minimum radius curves, with most 57" and a few over 200". The plan sacrifices maximum mainline length in favor of a single deck design with more aisle width, more relaxed scenes, and more room for visitors. The layout room is completely finished, with the ceiling painted as part of the sky to add to the overall spaciousness. The Control system is either DCS (the MTH system developed first for the three rail market) or TMCC (the Lionel system). Both allow untethered walk around operations. All locomotives have speed control, sound, and smoke. They are made by Atlas, Sunset, and MTH. Rolling stock is from a variety of manufacturers. All track and turnouts are Atlas O on Homasote road bed sitting on a subroad bed made of pink insulation board on ¾" plywood. The layout was started in June 2006 and is still well in the construction phase. Most of the principal scenic elements in the city and tracks leaving the city are finished. A few of these are inspired by the works of Edward Hopper. |
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Piedmont
Southern Railroad
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Piermont Division
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Prince
William Model Railroad Club
Our layout is in the "South Room" of the Quantico, VA Depot. This room was at one time the Railway Express Agency baggage room. The Depot was built in the early 1950s, replacing a previous structure. In the fifties passenger service was provided by the Richmond, Fredericksburg and Potomac Railroad. Today the Depot is a stop for commuters using the Virginia Railway Express and Amtrak. Our layout combines locales in our area such as Quantico and the bridge over Powell Cteek with more fanciful areas such as Armstrong, Allen, Hawck's Nest, Cooper's Holler, Dillinger and more. The railroad is well along on scenery and provides many photo opportunities. PLEASE NOTE: The town of Quantico, VA is located entirely within Marine Corps Base Quantico and you must show photo ID at the gate to enter.
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Southern Railway "Rathole", KY Division
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RO&S
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Swiss
Gotthard Line
Displayed in the
2005 NMRA National Train Show and featured in Model Railroader's
December 1997 issue as well as an upcoming feature on PBS "Tracks
Ahead" this is the largest known Z scale layout in the world. It is a
replica of the Gotthard Line through the Swiss Alps from Zurich to
Milan. 91% DCC and computer controlled, it occupies 2500 sq. ft. of
warehouse space and is over 14 feet tall. Even if you do not like the
small (Z scale) or European, this is still a "Must See" layout.
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Sylvania
Central Railroad
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Virginia
& Western Railroad
The V&W
is a
freelanced steam era railroad hauling people and cargo east and west
over the Blue Ridge Mountains just after WWII. The HO scale railroad
follows the Norfolk & Western prototype. The layout is 550 square
feet with scenery about 90% complete. All trackwork, crossovers, and
some 80 turnouts are handlaid with over 40,000 ties. The mountain
railroad features many bridges and trestles which are scratch built.
All of the buildings are either scratch built or craftsman kits and
highly detailed. There are many mirrors incorporated throughout the
layout. All of the 51 position signals have been installed and are
operating. The layout uses Digitrax Control system. The layout was
featured on the cover of the May 2008 issue of Model Railroader.
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Western
North Carolina RR and Blue Ridge Traction, Power and Light Company
(NVMR Club)
The Western North
Carolina Railroad is a single-track mainline incorporated in 1855 to
run from Spencer to Ashville, North Carolina. Southern Railway
took over operation of the Western North Carolina Railroad in
1896. Today the railroad is part of the Norfolk Southern
Railway. We model the WNC in the steam-to-diesel transition era
when the railroad was part of the Southern Railway.
"Guest Operate" (with a qualified pilot) as trains climb 60 inches from Spencer, NC through Majolica, Statesville, Clinchcross, Old Fort, and the "Old Fort Loops" (controlling grade over 3%) to Ridgecrest and then "drift" down Black Mountain through Swannanoa to Ashville, NC. There are interchanges with the Southern Railway main line in Spencer and the Clinchfield Railroad at Clinchcross. The layout is a "walk-under" design operated from 6 different elevated platforms ranging from 30 to 70 inches above the floor. Our expansive mountain scenery features thousands of hand-made trees and many detailed buildings including the beautifully detailed Salisbury, NC station scratch built by Doug Kirkpatrick, MMR which received the 2003 MER "Potomac Junction" Convention "Best of Show" award. We also have accurately scaled models of the Statesville and Old Fort depots. Another interesting building is our Spencer yard office, a model of our first home - the Southern Railway yard office in Alexandria, VA containing a model of our previous layout. There are several impressive bridges and trestles on the railroad. Traction modelers will enjoy our "Blue Ridge Traction, Power and Light Company" line along the edge of Spencer Yard. The line includes street trackage and a scratch built trolley barn and interchanges with the WNC at Statesville, Majolica, and Spencer Yard. We are located in the historic Washington and Old Dominion Vienna station built in 1859. The station served Vienna until 1968 whhen the W&OD ceased operations. The station and right-of-way are now the Washington and Old Dominion Regional Park. We have occupied the building since 1977.
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