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Large Scale Trolley Upgrade Started

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N ow that my large scale steam locomotive is running nicely in the backyard garden railroad (although I have not had a chance to run it much), I started upgrading my large scale trolley this past week.   I had to order a few different parts for this project but our USPS delivery service is abysmally slow so this little project is going very slowly while I impatiently wait on parts to arrive.  That being said, I've still made some headway the past few days. Just as I did previously with the steam locomotive, I started by disassembling and stripping down the trolley.  I pulled out all the wiring, removed the motor block and started coming up with a new wiring plan.   I have a new motor block that runs much more smoothly than the stock motor block so that was a definite upgrade.  The issue was that I needed to figure out how to mount this new motor block to the trolley since it was not made for this particular train.  I needed to come up with some sort of adaptation. Anyway, the first

Our New Garden Railroad

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Y esterday, we had a barbeque at our house with all the grandchildren.  Just two days earlier, I had finally completed a month of work rebuilding an old locomotive as well as building a little garden railroad around one of our gardens.   At the moment, it isn't much of a garden after trampling it for a month while building the railroad but we plan to have various plants and flowers in this garden next season.  The goal is to have enough tall flowering plants to block seeing the trackwork on the other side of the garden.   Here is a brief review of the sequence of events...   About ten years ago, I found a large scale set of trains for sale at a train show.  The guy was asking $40 for the locomotive, tender, gondola, caboose, and track.  He indicated that he had no idea whether it runs or not which usually means it does not run.  Regardless, $40 for just one part of this set was a tremendous bargain.   I told him that my primary interest was just having a model to work on for a nice

Flooding Again

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P arts of downtown Waterbury are under water again.  There are photos of this all over Facebook but I don't want to share other people's photos on my blog so you'll need to find the photos on Facebook.  In addition to extensive property damage to homes that were damaged just last July, there are significant road closures mostly due to the roads being washed out.  Some of the road closures are to keep people out of the areas that are still under water. Below is a map of northern Vermont showing the road closures.  As you can see, there is a big concentration of road closures in Waterbury.   At the moment, the status of our barbeque scheduled for Saturday is unknown.  Liza and Whitney are both trapped with no way to get out of there immediate area.  This may change by later today or tomorrow but, for now, they cannot go anywhere. We had some water in the house at a known roof leak.  Actually, it is a leak around the furnace flue.  Every few years I need to patch it so apparen

Oven Repair

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W e're having a fairly big barbeque on Saturday for all the combined summertime birthdays so all the grandchildren will be here.  As luck would have it, about a week before we are having people over to eat some food, our oven broke.  After waiting on parts to arrive and for me to squeeze in some time and effort in fixing it, we finally have a working oven again. We've been sort of neglecting the oven since COVID so it needed some work.  In order to replace this part, I had to disassemble quite a bit of the oven.  While I had the oven disassembled, I decided to give it a good cleaning too.  We can actually see through the glass door now!   This was a last minute task for today before dinner.  I was only about 30 minutes late with dinner tonight so this task wasn't too time consuming.  It was a pretty dirty and disgusting task though. Most of the day was spent programming my large scale steam locomotive.  I've spent quite a bit of time on this project!  After programming

Trestle Bridge Completed

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T oday was the day for working on the big curved trestle bridge on the new garden railroad in our backyard.  I had no problem squeezing in and completing everything...  cutting wood, installing foundation blocks, assembling the bents, and then installing the bents.   The only casualty is me!  My spinal injuries are killing me...  my knees are killing me...  every few feet, I buckle in pain.  I don't hit the floor but I drop about a foot and freeze for a few seconds in excruciating pain.  Hopefully this will pass quickly. This morning, I started with installing the foundation blocks.  Honestly, this part of the install went far more quickly than I had anticipated.  Then again, I went at this very heavy handedly which wasn't my initial intention.  I completely removed a whole wheelbarrow-full of dirt and roots by the big shovelful.  Once I cleared the area under the track completely, I then installed the foundation blocks.  Once I had all the blocks where I needed them, I backfil

Garden Railroad Trackwork Complete

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T oday was another productive day.  We started the day by heading to Shaw's to pick up one of my prescriptions and a few grocery bags of food to hold us over until later in the week.  Then I started collecting tools again in an attempt to finish laying all the trackwork in the garden railroad.  By dinnertime, all the trackwork was laid and I was able to smoothly push a passenger car around the layout by hand without it derailing.  This meant that the trackwork was good! I can't run my locomotive because I am still waiting on the USPS to deliver packages of parts...  packages that should have been here far too long ago.  Once these last packages arrive, then I can install the electronics into the locomotive.  I have a trolley that I plan to convert too but that project is on hold for now.  The priority is to get the big 4-6-0 steam locomotive completed so we can run it as soon as possible.   All the grandkids will be here this coming weekend so the priority is to get this up and

Another Very Productive Day

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T oday was another very productive day!  I am left in extreme pain but it was a very productive day. I ended up getting sunburned pretty badly but that doesn't seem to be painful.  Sheila thinks it will blister but, oddly enough, I'm not finding it all that painful at the moment.  It is uncomfortable but I wouldn't call it painful.  I'm thinking I got so sunburned because I may still be very sensitive and vulnerable to the sun after two antibiotic treatments for my tick bite in recent months.  The heat index today was at 102 degrees so it was definitely too hot out there to be doing anything physical as well as being prime sunburning weather.   The real pain is in my joints and my spine.  The pain is nearing an unbearable eight on the ten point pain scale.  I plan to take some AlevePM tonight so that should help me get some sleep by cutting the pain and making me drowsy.  This will also mean a down day tomorrow due to drowsiness but it is supposed to rain tomorrow anywa

Busy Productive Day

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F or a nice change, I had a very productive day today.  I was feeling relatively well...  just the typical quite painful spinal pain as well as some long-COVID breathing issues...  so, since I was feeling relatively well, I started my day at around 8am.   The first thing I did was to jump right into staining the backstops that I assembled last night for the new horseshoe pits.  I'm running quite low on stain so I had to mix two different colors but it looks "okay".  I would prefer a darker color like the rest of the outdoor wood on our property but it will be just fine. Sheila and I installed these backstops just before the sun set last night.  After installing them, we tossed a few horseshoes to see how the new horseshoe pits are doing.  Unfortunately, I quickly found that I'm not too happy with the quality of the horseshoe set I purchased.  The first thing I noticed is that the stakes are a bit skimpy.  Then I picked up one of the horseshoes and found that they are