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Written by Philip Schram
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For as long as I can
remember, a passion for trains was in my blood, in my DNA. My
grandfather on my mother’s side had a company with 450 employees that
specialized in train track repairs. My other grandfather was a train
engineer….and my Dad thinks that there is nothing better than mass
transportation via train. |
| My first contact and immediate
interest in live steam was at a temporary exhibit in Paris, France in
the Garden of the Louvres Castel (the very place where the kings used
to rule France up to 200 years ago).
A few years later, my Dad and I built a 200 foot long oval loop
dual gauge track in our backyard in France. We were steaming our 0-4-0
3½" gauge Tich and 5" gauge 0-4-0 Ajax. I finished my
education and earned a Master’s Degree in engineering which helped me
get a job at a large French automaker.
For the next two decades, I lived downtown in France, so no live
steam activities were possible. In 2000, with my family, we had the
opportunity to move to the United States. I was relocated by
my employer, a prominent automotive supply company. Cincinnati
welcomed us. Unfortunately, our first house was too small to
accommodate a train layout. |

3½" Tich pulling a 5" gauge rail car
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Autocad Layout
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In 2005, still in Cincinnati,
OH, we acquired a second house with 1.3 acres of steep wooded
backyard. Immediately, I saw the opportunity. Using AutoCAD software,
I started to design a layout.
I bought the first lengths of rail in June 2008. At the beginning,
it was a lot of prototyping. I had to engineer almost everything. I
got a lot of questions answered at the Cinder Sniffers in Cincinnati.
The two Civil Engineering for Outdoor Railroads books became
precious reference guides. Building a backyard train in an already
landscaped garden would promise a nice end-result. However, there was
still a lot of landscape to move around: grading, concrete work, wood
structures, trees and flowers, lighting, and walkways. Other
pre-existing structures had to be re-designed to accommodate the track
and the train shed. |
| My goal was to model enough in the first
30 feet to determine what would be scalable and what would not. I
finalized a prototypical module and then documented it. My train
layout is a scaled-down model, and so, for me, an authentic visual
appearance is important. For example, I have studied the ties, the
cadence of in-between spaces and ties so that aesthetically, it
resembles a full-scale train track.

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First prototypical unit. My son, who is a big help, testing the track.
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Typical silver mine entrance
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My track goes under our deck. Gradually, I began to
see this area as the entrance to a silver mine. With this in mind, we
started to design a silver mine set up. |

Beginning of an inspired silver mine
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For me, one of the most enjoyable aspects
is actually building the track. As real railroad companies do, I use
the track that has already been laid to help build more track. I
have a flatcar on which I put protective planks to carry the clay
and building materials to their final destination.
What is the difference between a club track and a backyard track? At
the club, you interact with experts. At home, you invite guests who
are blown away by your track and the trains. The smile on the
children's faces reminds me of Christmas and gives a one-of-a-kind
satisfaction. In September 2010, the line was officially christened
with two events: the Golden Spike and the Street Block Party. |

Beginning of the line: Victoria Station, tribute to our
British neighbors (neighbours as spelled in British English)
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| The Golden Spike Ceremony was held with friends and close family.
Everybody had the opportunity to screw and nail gold painted
fasteners. Immediately thereafter, the GE switcher left the
ceremony site with the first guests to head down to the silver mine
and the Paris-Gare de Lyon train station. Paris - Gare de Lyon is in
reference to our French origins, and my wife’s birthplace in Lyon.
The second event was the Block Party. Twenty children and twenty
adults were lining up, all excited about the ride. I “trucked” my
neighbors’ kids (and sometimes their parents) back and forth. What
are the visitors saying? They are impressed by the steep incline and
the landscape. The landscape was hard on the construction workload,
with a lot of earth to move by hand, one bucket at a time. But the
result is spectacular and it is fun for the riders to be sitting on a
train overlooking cliffs. |
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Middle section of the line
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Under the deck, the “silver mine” under construction,
soon to be enhanced with a turn table to serve as underground depot.
Photo taken from the second station, the Paris Gare de Lyon, the most
famous French station in Paris with trains leaving for the French
Riviera.
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The French Bistro set up has been designed by my wife.
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| Having a track at home, you
can adapt it quickly as the year unfolds. It can be the Halloween
Short Line or The Christmas Polar Express. With snow, it is an
opportunity to snow plow The line will be extended from the Paris - Gare de Lyon station with a
bridge around the cliff. All of the track has been set with laser
leveling and is accurate to 1/16”.
Many more projects to come:
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Building a
restaurant rail car. Everybody is asking for one, so I will
design it to entertain my railroad guests
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Doubling the line
in the mid section to allow two trains to run at the same time
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Turn table at each
end
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Train depot under
the deck
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Looking for a Doepke Super Yardbird
engine (let me know if you are aware of an available one)
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And finally, running the live steam engine on the line:
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All the track has been set with a laser leveling and is accurate to
1/16"
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440 Little Engine
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