RIGHT again, Ed.
 
Jim Lyle
 
 
In a message dated 3/2/2011 1:07:32 P.M. Eastern Standard Time,  
[email protected] writes:

> To  animate or not animate that is the question.  
> Andy  Malette

Andy....

Pardon me, Andy, for an opposite opinion.   But you are posing the wrong 
question.  The correct question, in my view  at least, is: How can someone 
animate in a realistic manner?  I agree  with Mr. Degnan that toylike animation 
is not what we want on our  layouts.  However, I would think most of us 
would enjoy the creativity of  some realistic animation that is plausible and 
authentically reproduces the  real world in a smaller size.

Advantages of realistic  animation:

1.  It can be inexpensive.
2.  It can be  mentally challenging.
3.  It can be very appealing to non-railroaders  as well as train guys.
4.  It makes your layout different from all  others.  Unique!
5.  It has endless variety.

Why not start  with RR-related animation like operating crossing gates and 
flashing grade  crossing lights as Dick Karnes is doing.  Just a realistic 
bell or  whistle for your favorite loco is a form of animation -- sort of.  
Then  move on to more scenic stuff like rotating windmills, working traffic 
lights,  flashing billboards, smoking smokestacks, etc. which are not hard to 
build/buy  and do create interest.  Rivets are not the only thing that are  
interesting.  

Once your juices are really flowing, advance to  scratchbuilding most 
anything you want.  There is an HO layout in this  area with a fully working 
logging operation complete with crane, overhead  wires, tongs for the logs, 
loading onto flat cars, etc.  It is an amazing  creation out in the woods where 
the lumberjacks are hard at work.  Logs  are picked up off the ground, moved 
via overhead cables to a siding, and then  lowered onto empty flat cars.  
If you model the 1940s era, why not have  some background music from WWII to 
create some ambiance and establish the time  frame?  Nothing like good 
wartime marching music to get your blood  flowing a bit faster.  

None of this is difficult to do and each  adds some measure of enjoyment to 
a layout.  

Having fun?   You bet....Ed  L.



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