The Utah Belt first appeared in the model press in 1978 with a feature in Railroad Model Craftsman, and Model Railroader recognized it first in 1986 and several times since then.
Although they didn't make the cover, a number of other accomplished St. Louis modelers were recognized in the
December 2019 issue of the NMRA Magazine. They include Brad Joseph and his HO layout; Dan McReynolds' HO scale ATSF Railway; Randy Meyer's Sn3 Canyon & Rocky Mountain; John Schindler (see below); John Peluso's HO railroad; Pete Smith's exquisite Sn3 1930's Loon Lake Railway & Navigation Co. layout featuring a number of geared locomotives; Doug McCormick's HO Union Pacific; and Ken Kroschwitz's monster HO layout at his hobby store.
All of the model railroads in this post will be on the Layout Tour at the convention, and several of the modelers will be among the dozens highlighted in the clinic offerings.
John Russel models the Rock Island railroad in O scale with his Rock Island Lines, and is the featured cover subject in the March 2020 issue of Railroad Model Craftsman. Set in the 1948-1952 era, the railroad fills a 65' x 35' basement. Motive power is largely custom-painted brass imports, and to understand the level of prototype accuracy, one only has to know John worked as a trainman on "The Rock" for more than 40 years. John is well known nationally in O-scale circles, and his railroad has also been featured in Narrow Gauge and Short Line Gazette on several occasions.
John's railroad is DC powered.
This latest effort is DCC powered by Digitrax.
Gary Gross is the guru of the Franklin Pacific Railroad, a three-level HO layout set in 1958. It is the cover photo and featured article in the January 2020 NMRA Magazine. All compacted into a 12' x 20' footprint, the railroad is heavy on operations. The single set of staging tracks represents both ends of the layout: St. Louis on the east and Springfield/Kansas City on the west. As I said, Gary is devoted to operations: he uses a 4:1 fast clock, and the optimum crew is seven. Two to run Franklin Yard, a dispatcher who sits away from the railroad, and four running the trains.
Control for the Franklin Pacific is DCC.
Dave Roeder by any criteria, is a prolific award-winning modeler. His Webster Groves & Fenton Railroad is a prototype/freelance HO scale model railroad set in the mid-1980s with first and second generation diesels providing a bulk of the power. The layout is built as an operating railroad and has entertained monthly operating sessions continuously since 1996. Dave's FG&W is the cover photo and feature in the March 2020 NMRA Magazine. The layout occupies a 30' x 70' room.
Dave has won hundreds ... even thousands of awards ... in modeling, and not just in railroading. He is also a award-winning modeler of automobiles in different scales
The Webster Groves & Fenton is powered by analog DC.
John Schindler and his large St. Louis Junction railroad features action on both sides of the Mississippi River. The 30' x 60' layout was featured prominently in the March 2020 Model Railroader. It's a current era, multi-deck walk-in railroad with a mainline run of 275 feet. Crews use 40 locomotives to move some 500 cars in a typical operating session. A crew consists of eight to twelve operators, and the dispatcher uses a computer and CATS signal logic. The railroad is a Digitrax DCC layout. John is co-chair of the 2020 NMRA National Convention in St. Louis.
Featured on more than one occasion over the last several months in the NMRA Magazine is David Lowell and his scratch-built structures and rolling stock memorializing the Chicago and Illinois Midland. His modeling is such that you will be hearing more about him in the coming months.
There's a lot of great modeling going on in the St. Louis area. This is just a tip of the iceberg.
No comments:
Post a Comment