Siskiyou Line Potpourri - MRH Theater

Joe Fugate's Siskiyou Line Potpourri

Model Railroad Hobbyist magazine publisher Joe Fugate talks about his large HO scale layout, the SP Siskiyou Line at the 2008 National Convention. We ran our video cameras at Joe's clinic for MRH Theater viewers, so enjoy!


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Click to play the Siskiyou Line Potpourri segment 1. (you may need to allow popups)Siskiyou Line Potpourri - segment 1 (17:06) - Watch Joe Fugate as he tells about his large HO scale layout that he started in 1991. Joe outlines how he models the prototype SP Siskiyou Line, and gives the latest updates on the layout. This segment also features a video clip of Tenmile Creek - the newest finished area on the layout.

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Click to play the Siskiyou Line Potpourri segment 2. (you may need to allow popups)Siskiyou Line Potpourri - segment 2 (14:49) - Joe continues talking about the Tenmile Creek scene and presents some photos of the scene under construction from bare benchwork to the finished result. Next Joe moves into the heart of his clinic - getting a more satisfying layout by learning to focus on a critical concept he calls "Quality of Run".

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Click to play the Siskiyou Line Potpourri segment 3. (you may need to allow popups)Siskiyou Line Potpourri - segment 3 (15:09) - Joe finishes his "Quality of Run" discussion, and then launches into talking about a secret to making maintenance easier on your layout, complete with a how-to example. Joe also talks about his videos and what they cover.

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Click to play the Siskiyou Line Potpourri segment 4. (you may need to allow popups)Siskiyou Line Potpourri - segment 4 (13:17) - Joe announces his newest model railroading media project: Model Railroad Hobbyist magazine!. Joe runs through the demo issue to illustrate the interactive nature that MRH hopes to achieve, and finally he fields some questions from the audience about his layout and MRH.

 Playback problems? Try playing this video from our mirror site.
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ADDITIONAL SISKIYOU LINE RESOURCES

 

Comments

+

Got to ask. Who creates the intro and other music you use to get no copyright issues ?

Marc

joef's picture

It's all prepaid

It's all prepaid stock footage from iStock, and prepaid royalty music. It's all over the web and available at great prices.

Joe Fugate​
Publisher, Model Railroad Hobbyist magazine

Joe Fugate's HO Siskiyou Line

Read my blog

ChrisNH's picture

Intro

Copyright would prevent it.. but I was thinking the other day that the old General Cinemas opening with the 2D line art movie camera rolling and that light snare and cymbal rythm music going with words like "No smoking", "dont eat your neightbor's popcorn", etc streaming from the lens, but with a train coming out of the lens instead..

http://vids.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=vids.individual&VideoID=392...

Ahh.. the 70s..

 

Chris

“If you carry your childhood with you, you never become older.”           My modest progress Blog

Thanks Joe

 I wish I could I could try my hand to the Dillard turn.  

Thanks,  Very Good

Chuck Geiger's picture

Tenmile

Looks great, love the look of the modern grade crossing signs and the trestle.

Chuck Geiger

ATSF/BNSF San Jacinto District

You Tube Page

jeffshultz's picture

The Fruit Loop

The Dole Turn, aka The Fruit Loop (which actually goes to Dillard) is probably the toughest switching job on the layout. Not only do you have to deal with multiple spurs & sidings to drop cars on, but in some cases where you put the car on the siding makes a difference as well. You are also dealing with a lot of cars, both incoming and outgoing. Additionally, you may have traffic passing you on the main - and since Dillard is the base of a triangle formed by it, Cottage Grove and Roseburg Yard... and it's in the entrance to boot, you've got all the foot traffic on the layout passing behind you.

 

Modeling a fictional GWI shortline combining three separate areas into one freelance-ish railroad.

Jeff Shultz - My blog index
MRH Technical Assistant

http://model-railroad-hobbyist.com/blog/jeffshultz

Chuck Geiger's picture

Siskyou Line

I was watching RFD Network and they had an episode of Trains and Locomotives with the Cascade Line on it (as the UP) and like Joe talks about in the movie last week, I always thought the SP ran from Northern California to Eugene through Roseburg. I never knew about the Cascade line until recently. I went to Bend, OR last year and couldn't figure out what the line from Klamath Falls North was. Duh - Cascade Line. When I was a kid my family went to Cottage Grove, OR in the late-60's and loved watching what Joe has reproduced in reality. Long Live Animal House.

Chuck Geiger

ATSF/BNSF San Jacinto District

You Tube Page

jeffshultz's picture

That line through Bend is

That line through Bend is actually the BNSF Oregon Trunk line, which meets up with the Cascade Line somewhere south of Bend. The other end of the Oregon Trunk is the Wishram bridge across the Columbia,  east of The Dalles. It's not unique in having a wye in the middle of the bridge (resulting in the bridge having a Y shape), but it's one of the first I knew about.

 

Modeling a fictional GWI shortline combining three separate areas into one freelance-ish railroad.

Jeff Shultz - My blog index
MRH Technical Assistant

http://model-railroad-hobbyist.com/blog/jeffshultz

jappe's picture

By far........

.......the best way to get home from work on a monday, hugg the mrs., cuddle the dogg, getting upstairs and firing up the pc,  just sit back and watch, enjoy and forget about every thing...........

Thank you for those chilling out afther work mondays so far....

Jappe

CEO, U.P.-Willamette Valley Sub aka U.P.-Eureka & Willamette Valley Branch

----------------------------------Ship it now, Ship it right---------------------------------------------

                                        

Don't ride behind me, I will not lead you, don't ride in front of me, I will not follow you, just ride next to me and be my bro......

Oregon Railroading

Hi

Since your model railroad is in Oregon I thought I'd throw this out, I used to work for Loram Maintenance of way  several years back. When I started out they sent me to Green River Utah from there we started grinding to Salt Lake. We got there by Christmas and took 2 weeks off, on returning to work we highballed to Bend Oregon and started grinding towards Texas at 8 miles an hour, it took a while, I wanted to add that traveling by rail you see different and better unspoiled country than any other way, I believe it was through Kalmath Falls that was the best. we crossed over five different parts of the lake, at one point we were si high up that when I took photos all you could see were clouds.

 I'm proud to say that I did get to work for a railroad and it was the best job I ever had, If been a model railroader since I was 10 and now I'm 45 and starting my second layout, because of space issues I'm going n scale I freelance so I can model anything that I desire, and one daY I wish to have a layout that resembles what I've seen in Oregon

Great Layout, Chet


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