Richard
(who happens to be in Aus at the moment)
They don't look very Micro to me!They look like Minx Micro drives for controlling the points with servos.
Richard is right. They are Micro Minx servo controllers. They aren't very micro, but the servos they control are only the size of a postage stamp and will be fitted on top of the baseboard suitably disguised. No they weren't cheap but the price included two servos apiece plus all ribbon wire and plugs, and I only needed 12 of them to control the 20 points and signals on the layout.They don't look very Micro to me!
Is that David relaxing in the background?Almost all the track laying finished. Only one more siding and the last 9 inches of the two head shunts nearest the camera to go. Wiring droppers starts in earnest next week, after a break for three days walking the dog on a Devon beach.
View attachment 66938
Yes, having a well-earned rest from Herculean labour, bless him!Is that David relaxing in the background?
John - Scenically 24' long by 3'3" wide. The fiddle yard adds another 7'. There are four main boards (excluding the as yet unbuilt fiddle-yard) plus an 18" legless one clamped on the non-fiddle-yard end; whose main function is to allow the head-shunts to be long enough to hold a railmotor and six -wheel coach.Hi how long is this layout
John
JB - The brackets have been used to hold the trackbed above the baseboards, because I'm not a member of the Flat Earth Society. I had hoped that two brackets at each trackbed end where the break between baseboards comes, would be enough; given that the trackbeds are 9mm birch ply. However in the two places where the trackbed is so wide the gap between brackets is more than 9 or 10 inches, another bracket is required to maintain rigidity. These brackets were chosen because they're very strong and the slotted holes allow precise adjustment up and down and to and fro.Are the brackets in the middle of the boards adjustable in case the main structure should sag?
JB.
John - Scenically 24' long by 3'3" wide.