55. MRH14-09-Sep2014-P - page 160

Fiddle yards
Fiddle yards are the most important ingredient of minimum
space layouts. They convert our small model scenes into work-
ing railways by representing the “rest of the world” beyond the
boundaries of the layout. Trains enter the visible part of the
model and leave it, bound for distant places — but they actu-
ally move to and from the fiddle yard, where cars, locos and
even whole trains can be swapped out, rearranged and gener-
ally juggled by hand, to get ready for their next entrance.
The most basic fiddle yard is just a couple of hidden tracks
where a backstage operator can work on the trains. In this
simple example the fiddle yard is hidden behind a row of in-
dustrial buildings. Trains make their entrance in the middle of
the modeled scene (a good space-saving trick) and proceed
to the town and station at the right. They exit by disappearing
behind the industrial buildings,
into the yard.
There are several ingenious de-
sign methods for persuading a
fiddle yard to furnish more op-
eration in less space (and often
with less handling required).
Here are the three most com-
monly used fiddle yard designs.
A sector plate
(or swing table)
is a length of track that is piv-
Minimum space layouts - 3
MRH-Sep 2014
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