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Kato
NW2 181 idles during a switching move at Beaver Meadow. The crossing tower
is a scratch build model of the tower at Linden Street, Allentown. The
tower was built from Evergreen styrene. The NW2 is painted with acrylic
automotive paint that provides a perfect surface for decaling.
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In
the mid 1970’s, prior to the formation of Conrail, many of the bankrupt
Eastern railroads were showing signs of deferred maintenance with slow
running being the order of the day. Beaver Meadow portrays a proud and
defiant Lehigh Valley during this period. Set around the Hazelton area,
Beaver Meadow serves the rapidly dwindling anthracite fields and is a
secondary route for through traffic.
The
Lehigh Valley was also known amongst railfans as ‘The route of the
colourful diesel’ and this is certainly the case on Beaver Meadow.
Designed
and built over a period of around seven years this compact home layout
features weathered locomotives and freight cars and a scenicked staging
yard at the rear of the layout.
Since
the layout was erected in its present home, the track plan has been
improved for greater operational interest, a complete re-wiring with cab
control has taken place, electromagnetic uncoupling ramps have been
installed at strategic locations for greater operational enjoyment and the
track has been re-ballasted.
The structures on the layout vary from kits, kit bashing or scratch
built. The station building at Beaver Meadow is a scratch built version of
a reduced Allentown style structure, though most structures originate from
kits.
Where appropriate, structures have been modified to fit the location or
to represent actual buildings featured in the Morning Sun Lehigh Valley
books from which most research is gleaned. Much has to be completed before
Beaver Meadow has reached the desired exhibition standard.
- Ian
Metcalfe (ianandros at tinyworld dot co dot uk) |