Wonder if they put any locos and rolling stock into the scenes? There
certainly would have been a lot of railroad going into the port area.
Val
You haven't seen anything until you have seen NorthLandz in NJ. This guy
has a train layout that has a walking tour a mile long. It takes 2 hours
minimum to see the whole layout. When you think your done you pass a
sign that says, "your only 50% through the tour. It's pretty unbelievable.
Rich
--
"You can lead them to LINUX
but you can't make them THINK!"
> You haven't seen anything until you have seen NorthLandz in NJ. This guy
> has a train layout that has a walking tour a mile long. It takes 2 hours
> minimum to see the whole layout. When you think your done you pass a
> sign that says, "your only 50% through the tour. It's pretty unbelievable.
is there any info on the web about this guy and his layout?
tnx :)
--
Fox Mulder
...the truth is out there
I was fascinated by the very specific sort of terrain modelling in a radar
trainer when I was at FAETUPAC (Fleet Airborne Electronics Training Unit
Pacific) on NAS North Island at San Diego.
This was the analog era, pre-digital: to simulate radar returns from a
moving aircraft [a P-3 - we were an anti-sub training center], they had a
small high frequency sound transducer mounted on a traveling bridge [like a
gantry crane, or a plotter but movable in both axes] over a water filled
tank. The bottom of the tank was a model of the southern SF Bay area
(around Moffett Field) made with small blocks of various materials and a
wide variety of grades of sand glued in place. The bridge moved up and down
the tank and the transducer moved back and forth across it, while the
transducer head rotated at a rate appropriate to the radar involved, and the
sonar return was translated and fed to actual radar displays. I imagine
someone did a lot of research comparing the sonar returns to tapes of actual
Moffet Field area radar returns to evaluate the densities and grain sizes of
the sand and other objects.
--
Steve
Big Fork & Diehl RR
* DO NOT look into Laser with remaining eye! *
Don Cardiff
Layouts by Cardiff
Kaneville, IL
Dad was an airline pilot. He took us to the flight training center where we
saw the enormous 3d map with the simulator camera flying over it.
One thing they sometimes did was capture a cockroach and pin it to the runway
on the model. The Texas-sized roaches were just as wide as the toy runway, so
on final approach would be directly into it's greatly magnified jaws.
Hmmmmmmmmmmmmmm Sounds like a Sci fi movie I once saw!!!