CincySouthernRwy
Trainz Jedi
I wanted to share a little bit about my biggest Trainz project which I am 99% ready to release. I started work on the Virginian & Ohio after someone posted early stage pics on a web site, then went dormant around the end of 2002. Following version 3 of Allen McClelland's Afton Division layout as published in the January 1998 issue of Model Railroader, this layout has been severely updated about ten times, including new track and three complete re-texturings.
I hope to eventually add on the Gauley Division and have started a few baseboards designed to connect with this layout. I also plan on releasing a lot of new and updated rolling stock. The only thing I haven't started on yet is a PA-1, an SD50, and a proper observation car. Other than that, I have new Geeps, RS11's, C424's, GP38-2's, DS4-4-1000's, SW1500's, E8's, autoracks, gons, boxcars, cabooses, etc.
Some of the photos aren't cropped properly. I just don't notice the little Surveyor and Driver menus very much anymore. Editing them all would take another month.
Since I like story format when publishing photos, here goes:
"V&O Extra 3056 West"
I took a railfanning trip along the Virginian & Ohio on a quiet Sunday back in high school. My friend Wade Foxx (who later became an engineer for CSX) and I followed V&O Extra 3056 West for most of the time, picking up the train on the outskirts of Afton, VA and following to Jimtown. It was pure luck that we caught the train as it was nearly the only thing moving on the whole dang division that afternoon.
Here is where we found the crew of Extra 3056 West completing their brake test, the pounding throb of air compressors recharging the train line and the quiet rythmic hum of EMD 645's demanding attention. The interlocking signal showed green over red. Within minutes, the engineer tugged twice on the horn and throttled up. The chase is on!
Here is our train, having just passed the tower that guards the Smith Subdivision interchange in Afton, VA. In fact, the yard is visible in the upper left. The bridge for the Smith Sub is in the background.
Extra 3056 West is about to hit the grade crossing in Blackstone. H.L. Werth Paper Company is on the left. You can make out the Smith Sub sandwiched between the scrap yard (on the site of the former Blackstone depot) and the cold storage warehouse that is just east of Sadler's Distillery.
This shot is the other side of the grade crossing. The speed limit is now up from 15 to 25 mph, and the engineer throttled up right after I clicked the shutter.
The first two units pass what would look like a rural area if not for the homes of a well-to-do neighborhood in the background. Reminds me of the former B&O tracks through Glendale north of Cincinnati, Ohio - NIMBY people in million dollar mansions complaining about the "noisy trains" that make their lives possible.
I hope to eventually add on the Gauley Division and have started a few baseboards designed to connect with this layout. I also plan on releasing a lot of new and updated rolling stock. The only thing I haven't started on yet is a PA-1, an SD50, and a proper observation car. Other than that, I have new Geeps, RS11's, C424's, GP38-2's, DS4-4-1000's, SW1500's, E8's, autoracks, gons, boxcars, cabooses, etc.
Some of the photos aren't cropped properly. I just don't notice the little Surveyor and Driver menus very much anymore. Editing them all would take another month.
Since I like story format when publishing photos, here goes:
"V&O Extra 3056 West"
I took a railfanning trip along the Virginian & Ohio on a quiet Sunday back in high school. My friend Wade Foxx (who later became an engineer for CSX) and I followed V&O Extra 3056 West for most of the time, picking up the train on the outskirts of Afton, VA and following to Jimtown. It was pure luck that we caught the train as it was nearly the only thing moving on the whole dang division that afternoon.
Here is where we found the crew of Extra 3056 West completing their brake test, the pounding throb of air compressors recharging the train line and the quiet rythmic hum of EMD 645's demanding attention. The interlocking signal showed green over red. Within minutes, the engineer tugged twice on the horn and throttled up. The chase is on!

Here is our train, having just passed the tower that guards the Smith Subdivision interchange in Afton, VA. In fact, the yard is visible in the upper left. The bridge for the Smith Sub is in the background.

Extra 3056 West is about to hit the grade crossing in Blackstone. H.L. Werth Paper Company is on the left. You can make out the Smith Sub sandwiched between the scrap yard (on the site of the former Blackstone depot) and the cold storage warehouse that is just east of Sadler's Distillery.

This shot is the other side of the grade crossing. The speed limit is now up from 15 to 25 mph, and the engineer throttled up right after I clicked the shutter.

The first two units pass what would look like a rural area if not for the homes of a well-to-do neighborhood in the background. Reminds me of the former B&O tracks through Glendale north of Cincinnati, Ohio - NIMBY people in million dollar mansions complaining about the "noisy trains" that make their lives possible.
