View Full Version : How do I keep Yard Track straight?
TomBauman
February 9th, 2007, 12:35 AM
Hi guys,
A little help please.
I have several yards in my layout and all have the same problem.
I feed a single track off the main line. When I add turnouts for the many spurs in the yard the main feeder gets totally out of shape. I tried using the fixed track turnout but the straight leg is too long and speads the parallel spur tracks to far apart.
Any suggestions on how to keep a feeder track straight?
Thanks
Tom
The_Salesman
February 9th, 2007, 12:36 AM
Use the Bend Track Option to straighten track back to nice lines.
mtldrm38
February 9th, 2007, 02:45 AM
Is your track layed as a straight spline without breaks?
Try adding some spline points along that line and then bend tool if double line etc do the same at same points to help center em.....should do the trick the longer the spline the worse the bow....
Dave
john259
February 9th, 2007, 02:49 AM
There are some good track laying hints here (http://trains.0catch.com/tutorial.html) - John
Winnipeg
February 9th, 2007, 06:04 AM
What I like to do to keep everything in line is click on the gridmode button ( upper right corner ), once the gridmode appears use the lines of the grid as a guide for placing straight track, houses, pretty much everything you use.
Works for me.
Later
hawkwind
February 9th, 2007, 02:46 PM
After your tracks are straightened, maybe you'll want them to be perfectly parallel, especially with very long yards.
I found a stunning tool made by Globule here:
http://globuletrainz.free.fr/Creation/Divers01.htm
Please download the "Kit de placement des voies et quais" pack, and just snap the "V" elements one with each other.
The "V" elements stand for tracks, and the "Q" elements stand for platforms.
- you can choose the spacing between tracks
- the tracks are perfectly parallel, no matter how long the yard is
- you may move the whole yard as a "one piece of track", even with a consist on it
Hope this helps
Hawkwind
dh2k3
February 9th, 2007, 02:54 PM
Also see here (http://forums.auran.com/trainz/showthread.php?t=5038) as well.
HTH
Dave
aradlaw
February 9th, 2007, 03:03 PM
Hi Tom,
Check out my site for a collection of surveyor toolz, you should find some of them useful :)
philskene
February 9th, 2007, 07:01 PM
Hi Tom --
This sort of topic seems to come up quite frequently.
See also here:
http://forums.auran.com/trainz/showthread.php?t=4423
Phil
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