I have a thing for long mainline routes. My first creation was [is] the CSX River Line from Jersey City, NJ to Selkirk (Albany) NY. I threw in the Oak Island yards in Newark, Kearny yard, and the National Docs secondary track so that I have a source for traffic on the main line.
I used Transdem to create the terrain and place track and roads. I used Google Earth and MS Live (Bing) to locate the track, even switches and sidings were visible.
The total length of the route is about 150 miles.
I have been working on detail in and around the areas I am most familiar with, and do have to admit that it gets tiring sometimes. My least favorite phase is placing buildings. Since this is a prototypical route, I was originally very stubborn about deviating from the real thing.
But it is impossible to find buildings on DLS or 3rd party sites for everything along this route. Seems that there is not an abundance of USA type buildings in Trainz.
I have decided that I will allow myself to deviate from the prototype route for buildings and ground textures, since I find it more fun and relaxing to go "free" on these things.
For track though, I have not deviated much. I re-created the entire Selkirk yard (it's the largest in the Northeast US) using sat maps (GE & Bing), and track maps.
At one point, this route also included NJT's Hoboken lines. I had the entire Hoboken yard laid out using sat maps and track maps.
Later, I decided that the route was too large, and I cut the NJT portions, except where they cross or interchange with CSX, NS, or Conrail.
When I get bored with building, I run my trainz. I have signals installed on a 30 mile stretch of the route, and spent some time working with the scripts to create more prototypical operation, then inspired the creator of the assets to modify his script himself. The result is a very prototypical signal system.
Recently, I became a bit bored with this long mainline railroad. The problem is that there aren't enough industries or branch lines to keep things interesting.
I could of course add my own, but I really want to keep it prototypical.
So I started a second "near" prototype route. This route is the line from Allentown to Scranton PA, which includes the famous Lehigh Gorge. I have included the branch lines to Hazleton, the one to Tamaqua, and several others along the route.
I used Transdem again to create terrain, track, road, and water splines.
For this route, I have decided that it will be a "quasi-prototype" route. The main line track will be correct, as will placement of tunnels, major branch lines and industry, etc.
But I will decide where to place passing tracks, and will place most of my own industries. I will also go free in texturing and placing buildings.
I think this latest route gives me the best of both worlds. While I have no intention of abandoning my first route, which I have been working on for more than a year, it is nice to have a variety of routes in the building and running stages to keep me interested as my moods change.
I find that at night, when I'm winding down towards bedtime, I like to do track laying and texturing, but never buildings. Honestly, if I could get away with it, I would create a route with no buildings at all! Problem is that I wouldn't have any reason for the railroad to exist<g>.
As for small routes, I do not enjoy them. I have always been more interested in activities that progress over a longer period of time than those that are completed in a short period.
I do have to agree though, that a highly detailed small route would be very interesting to look at. I have looked at some of the routes supplied with TS2009, and the Carbon City route I was beta testing a few weeks ago. A lot can be done with a small work area if you follow a plan before you start.
But, my brain is "wired" in such a way that I have always enjoyed longer, and often slower activities over fast and short ones.
The major drawback for large routes is that they are usually too large to fit in DLS.
I had planned to create a route for DLS, but both my CSX and the Allentown-Scranton route are far too large for DLS. I plan to make these routes available for DL on a future website I am planning.
FW