 
          Getting Real Column - 4
        
        
          possible into the space. Plans called for adding a second deck
        
        
          around the remainder of the layout, but it was never built.
        
        
          By mid-summer 2009 I’d built the benchwork, including a helix,
        
        
          and laid and wired the vast majority of the track. The result
        
        
          was a layout with a mainline length slightly more than five
        
        
          scale miles. By February 2010 I was ready to put the layout
        
        
          through an early test “open house” session. This was the first
        
        
          time I’d had more than three or four people in the layout room
        
        
          at one time actually running the trains. I relayed the story of
        
        
          that “Sea Trial” session, as we called it, in the May/June 2010
        
        
          issue of MRH .
        
        
          Mechanically, “SNE 4.0” operated fine, with only a few small,
        
        
          easily corrected glitches. But during that test session and on
        
        
          several occasions over the next few months when more than a
        
        
          couple of people were in the layout room at once, more seri-
        
        
          ous issues with the design reared their ugly head, and I grew
        
        
          increasingly uncomfortable with my creation.
        
        
          My wife could tell something was wrong since suddenly I
        
        
          wasn’t spending every waking hour in the basement. I wrote
        
        
          off this lack of activity to some sort of modeling funk brought
        
        
          on by a big push to get the layout ready for that first test run.
        
        
          But it became apparent to everyone, including me, that this
        
        
          was no mere case of model railroading blahs. With input from
        
        
          good friends and lots of soul searching I put everything – scale,
        
        
          gauge, and prototype, on the table.
        
        
          In retrospect, I’d say the layout had gotten away from me. I’d
        
        
          succeeded in getting a plenty long mainline into the space,
        
        
          but it otherwise it was too big, too complicated, and, perhaps
        
        
          most importantly, too wrong, for me. I suppose I could have
        
        
          continued with the current layout just to be bull-headed (one
        
        
        
        
          MRH-Mar 2013