Hi All,
I guess this is the best place to put this announcement. I have started a new website entitled: gandydancer.biz, devoted to virtual railroading using Trainz Simulator. It will eventually include many screenshots, Trainz tips primarily focusing on a project I have been working on for over a year that involves reconstruction of a 40-mile stretch of NYNH&H branch line from Waterbury, CT to Winsted, CT, not as it appears now, but as it appeared in 1938. I have mentioned the project on the Forum in the past. Hopefully, when the project is completed, I will make it available as an iBook with photos and videos, entitled, "A Slow Freight to Winsted." The website is still under construction, but I have posted some screenshots just to get things going.
This has been a real challenge, but really a lot of fun, trying to find right-of-way, old roads, and highways that no longer exist. Of course, modeling the dense forest and undergrowth of the New England landscape will make you lose hair. Luckily, as you all know, you only have to model what you can see from the cab. By the way, the site is not a business (nothing to sell), but I had to use the .biz because it was the only "gandydancer" available.
Jim
I guess this is the best place to put this announcement. I have started a new website entitled: gandydancer.biz, devoted to virtual railroading using Trainz Simulator. It will eventually include many screenshots, Trainz tips primarily focusing on a project I have been working on for over a year that involves reconstruction of a 40-mile stretch of NYNH&H branch line from Waterbury, CT to Winsted, CT, not as it appears now, but as it appeared in 1938. I have mentioned the project on the Forum in the past. Hopefully, when the project is completed, I will make it available as an iBook with photos and videos, entitled, "A Slow Freight to Winsted." The website is still under construction, but I have posted some screenshots just to get things going.
This has been a real challenge, but really a lot of fun, trying to find right-of-way, old roads, and highways that no longer exist. Of course, modeling the dense forest and undergrowth of the New England landscape will make you lose hair. Luckily, as you all know, you only have to model what you can see from the cab. By the way, the site is not a business (nothing to sell), but I had to use the .biz because it was the only "gandydancer" available.
Jim