Thursday 11 September 2014

Filming Trenholme Junction


This blog is to explain some of the questions asked about the filming of the layout and takes the subjects raised from the YouTube channel comments.

Observations


Before I go into specific issues, there are a few thing worth noting. 

Have you ever watched a film on YouTube where there is a fantastic looking layout which has obviously had many hours of hard work lavished on it, only to find for the next twenty minutes the same couple of trains appear and disappear every twenty seconds or so? 


The same thing can be said of model railway exhibitions, although to a lesser degree. Exhibition layouts usually have the opposite effect of the appearing/disappearing phenomena with large 'realistic' pauses of non-activity. I attended an exhibition recently in the hope that this situation may have changed in the few years since I last attended one but, alas, it hasn't. 

One layout, superb, was an operational disaster. Within a few minutes of my arrival a train held in a loop set off and ended in the scrap yard, an express pulled into the station loop and then inched forward very slowly until it collided with the next main line train. Amazingly, this was going on while a healthy discussion was going on with the cast of thousands operating the layout. 
A second layout of similar high quality, had timetable working - on a quiet branch!!!!!!

You can argue that the exhibitors are amateur but there are a few things to bear in mind here.


First, I paid good money to see these exhibits and I expect to be entertained and inspired.


Second, These exhibitions are showcases for the clubs and should serve to attract new people to the hobby and to the clubs. 


Third, If somebody like me who has a passion for the hobby is bored, then the future is bleak.  
 

Filming Factors


In the films I produce on the layout, there are a few self imposed rules I follow:-

There is a story.

No train will appear more than once in each film (except the subject matter)

No gaps in operations of more than 3 seconds.

There are no helicopter shots.  

Where practical, continuity between the films is maintained in each of the series. This means for example, film 2 will follow from film 1, many times the films will follow each other so they can be watched like a soap.

Filming Subjects

If you've read the rest of this blog, you'll know that the layout was built to record railway operation. In order to do that, the railway has to go from place to place, the same purpose as the real thing. 

There are five stations on the layout and passenger trains can pass through all of them in a continuous run. As in real life, most of the passenger stock is in assembled rakes and in my films they quite often take a background role in passing trains.

Many people ask why don't you have lots of expresses all running together?
There is a very good reason why I don't this.   
I refer you to my opening paragraph, although on this layout it takes more than twenty seconds to appear/disappear the effect would be just the same, but with boring long gaps.

When trains are running fast, its difficult for the camera to make a good image and you simply end up with a blurry image where you can't see anything at all. It's an easy experiment to replicate, try it with your phone camera and see the result. You could argue a better camera would do the job, probably, but where would you get one small enough to film in the places I do? 

Another point to consider is this. There are eight continuous ovals on the junction all capable of express operation simultaneously. If you run these in one film with say a ten coach train on each then that's eighty coaches required. You would probably get a one minute blurred film and use up about 70% of the coaching stock in one go. What do you put in the next film?  

The junction has many parcels vans which are spread all over the layout and these are popular in films giving some variety and interest to what are some pretty boring and monotonous passenger stock movements.

Most people from my age group would have been introduced to railways by travelling in DMU's (Diesel Multiple Units) and the best way to see the railway was to be standing up behind the driver. The series depicting this position is very popular and is my favourite of all the films I've made. At the risk of boring a few, I intend to do some more journeys from this position, I'm sure there are some unexplored routes left.

By far and away the greatest amount of handling on the railways at the time portrayed was the goods traffic. When the layout was designed I was careful to make sure there was enough rail served industry in order to have vibrant and busy goods traffic, hence the leaning towards this subject. Most of the industry around where I grew up was rail served, shunting went on day and night. This part of the re-creation of this time was to show the complicated movements required to achieve relatively simple tasks. There are dozens of films in existence of all the crack expresses, but very little in the detail of the goods operations which after all were the reason why the railways existed at all.

Comments


I am never more amused with any of the comments than the pre-occupation there is for questions about filming in the tunnels. It is amazing how many times I'm asked about this subject. 
A tunnel is a black hole, probably the most boring monotonous piece of film you can imagine. 
The tunnels on Trenholme Junction are very long, taking some time to traverse. If you film them, all you can see is the bracing for the layout board above. Nothing makes me switch of a film more quickly than a view of the underside of someone's baseboard and therefore I don't want the same thing on my films. 

Speed is another subject which comes up frequently. Going back to the Exhibition comments earlier in this article, this is another area where the image of a brilliantly visual layout can be destroyed in seconds. There's nothing worse than seeing an 0-4-0 shunter taking off at the speed of a Ferrari and smashing into a line of wagons and then taking again faster than the express next to it. I can't understand why this area is the most neglected of the presentation package. On saying this, I not saying that, I'm not perfect, I have to have a cringe when I see some of my earlier attempts. The point here is this detail is as important as any other part the model. On filming operations, its easy to film it again and edit out any mistakes, but a little practice in this area does make a big difference.

Another area which attracts a lot of questions, is about how the films are made. The aim of this channel is to produce a record of a working railway viewed from the same perspective I viewed it from as a child.
I watched all the Harry Potter films and was very impressed by all the special effects and how well the thing was put together, but then I watched the film of how it was made and although it was fascinating, I'm not sure  knowing what went on in the background enhanced my enjoyment of the films 'seen as is'. After many requests, I have toyed with the idea of produced a film about the making of the films, but I'm torn between destroying the images I set out to achieve.    


Equipment


Since December 2012 :-

Track side shots:- Samsung HMX-M20P 1080p Camcorder


On board shots:- Sony HDR-AS10 1080p Camcorder


Editing Suite:- Sony Movie Studio HD Production Suite


Prior to December 2012


On board shots:- Dogcam 720p camcorder 


For more details of the above - Google them. 


Facts


Generally, it takes around an hour to make each minute of film and the channel gets around 25,000 to 30,000 hits per month. 

One of the things I wanted to do when I set out on this project was to inspire and engage the younger generation in this hobby and when I started out the YouTube channel, almost all the views were from the generation which grew up in the time frame the layout was set (55-65+).
As time has gone on age of the viewers has started to even out, 4.5% in 13 -17 age range, 9.4 % 18-24 age range, 25% 24 -34 age range, 23 % 35-44 age range. 
The 55-65+ now form only 29% of the total views. 
This is a massive shift in a couple of years and hopefully this is indicating younger people are interested and will join the hobby. 
Another fact which fascinates me, is that around 16% of all viewers are females in the 25-44 age range.

Conclusion


I realise that when you put something on public display then you should be prepared for criticism and I'm always receptive to constructive criticism, (there's some been some rude ones as well). In highlighting some of the things here, I'm not been rude to anybody, but I'm making an observation of what I see wrong elsewhere and how I've tried to address these issues in my efforts and highlighting these issues is for the common good.    

The building of the layout and the films I produce are a very personal re-creation of the world I grew up in. I know what the gaps in books/films are, because in searching for the information during the building of the layout, I couldn't find any........ 

To view the channel, click the link below:-

https://www.youtube.com/user/dougattrenholmebar














Friday 20 June 2014

Now & Then magazine article.

Now & Then magazine is an independent regional magazine distributed around the Middlesbrough area where the Trenholme Junction layout is based upon.

June's edition of the magazine carries an article about the layout.






Friday 23 May 2014




The infinite layout

For those of you who have read the rest of the items in this blog, you will know that I start my thought processes for the design of a layout by examining what I expect from the end product. 

Making a series of decisions which will ultimately result in a creation of enduring interest. Past layouts have failed to come up to the mark because I haven't taken the full thought process to before starting work. Any problems encountering were solved 'on the hoof' with a predictable unpredictable outcome. 

I am now crystallizing my thoughts for the design of my next layout.

I know I keep banging on about the 'entertainment factor' but if you don't get that right, its a waste of time and energy to start the thing in the first place. Its hard to believe that even a layout the size and complexity of Trenholme Junction does have a finite number of different of routes and aspects. Up to date I've made nearly 200 videos on the layout, all have been published on the channel, but most of the routes have now been recorded and something else now is required.

The next layout I build will not have the luxury of the 'train shed' specifically built for the purpose, but will have a (hopefully) reasonable sized room in which to house it. Getting the best out the space available is what a good design is all about. I think having a big central station as the focus is definitely going to feature in the new layout. Another thing I've learnt about when building this layout is the use of tunnels, especially when filming gives some incredible flexibility. Tunnels (when filming) are a new take on what used to be called a 'scenic break'. The scenic break was a way of splitting the layout into several scenes. On a conventional layout the scenes usually can all be seen at once, but, from a camera you can isolate them from each other much more effectively and the use of tunnels, completely. 

The new layout will be all about filming. In order to keep a lifetime of entertainment then the layout must be infinitely expandable so as to emulate the same way exploring the real railway network.

The overview of the new design is not to design the whole layout, but to design a central hub, a complete self contained layout, in this case a large station, surrounded by tracks leading through dead end tunnels. This part of the layout will be housed in the main 'railway room'. 

In an earlier blog I posed the notion of several people contributing to building a 'piece' of a layout and then bringing the pieces together to film them all as one. There was some very minor initial excitement about this idea but not much more than that. I realised, that people probably would probably not be motivated by the idea of their piece being only usable when with all the others and maybe relying on others doesn't appeal either. This idea isn't a lost point though. The idea of another layout with a tunnel would mean that you could film both layouts as one running from one to the other via the tunnels. Continuity would be very easy to achieve especially with the 'cab rides' and 'on board' cameras.

When you think about it, this idea would create the infinite layout. 
In its simplest manifestation, an oval of track with a station. The station has a bay platform with a single line going to a tunnel. This could be a layout on the kitchen table. Out in the garage, a branch line from its tunnel  leading to a terminus. A simple terminus built on a shelf. Maximum use of space and the usual arrangement of fiddle yard is now the inside of the camera. 
To take a simple step further. If the branch line had a junction leading to a tunnel, a coal mine could be built in the shed.......

This idea also would suit those with little space for a layout, who would like to 'keep modelling' whilst waiting for families to grow up, knowing that whatever space is available in the future your current efforts will fit.

This is the idea I am to use for the next layout I build

Taking this idea a step further, there would be no reason why two (or more) people building a layout shouldn't incorporate a tunnel(s) on their layouts. 

Imagine a film, made travelling across several different layouts as one complete journey.

     
   
   














       

      

Sunday 23 March 2014

Trenholme Junction Track Plan



Trenholme Junction layout plan


Notes 

There has many requests, made from the comments on the YouTube channel, for a track plan of Trenholme Junction. In the past I resisted the temptation to produce one. I didn't start off with a track plan when I built the layout. There was a list of features the layout would include and these were on a simple list.

I wanted people to travel the trains and take the journeys, just like I did when I was a child. Each time I was asked, I answered, ride the trains, especially the DMU cab rides and you would discover the routes and places.

Imagine my surprise when somebody wrote to me and said he had done just that AND he'd drawn a track plan based on many hours taking the journeys'. When Dave Bernard sent me the plan I was even more astonished that it was probably about 90% accurate. There has been some adjustments made and the plan is what is available here. Its not dead to scale, but then it doesn't have to be, the components in the right places is more important.

For those of you who have read the rest of this blog, some bits will be repeated, sorry about that.

There are two large ovals, each four roads wide, one on the lower level and one on the upper. The passenger roads are the inner pair on the lower level and the outer pair on the upper. There are five stations, two on the lower and three on the upper. Two tunnels connect the levels together together with a long incline which can be seen in full, over 40 feet long. 
There are Marshalling Yards on each level, the lower can store 400 wagons plus another 100 in the reception dispatch road.  

Stations

None of the stations are named, this is deliberate. I wanted representative types of stations on the layout, not actual replicas of the real thing. Reference to each one by geographical location, 'Main' being the exception.

The Main Station (lower) has five full length platform faces and two bay platforms, one at the north end and one at the south. The full length platforms can accommodate eighteen coach trains. There is a station avoidance road to the west which allows trains to pass through the station through to the branch without passing the platforms.
The carriage sidings are situated to the west and south sides of the station. 

The North Station (upper) is has the most complicated junction and is the branch end. The curved platforms serve the passenger carrying through roads and the straight platform is the termination of the branch. Provision has been made for the branch to continue into the next room where a terminus on the scale of Whitby Town was intended to be built. Single track would continue from the end of this station and a double track from the lower level under the station would join the new terminus. It's unlikely this terminus will be built.

The West Station (upper) has two through roads and a bay platform. The bay platform can be accessed only from the south junction and the train has to reverse direction to continue its journey. The run round loop is also the head shunt for the pit sidings. 

The East Station (upper) is both a through station for the main line and also has one platform face on the branch line. The branch line platform face also serves as the head shunt for the upper marshalling yard.

The South East Station (lower) is very similar to South Bank where I grew up and has two main line platform faces. I added a bay to one end to give more operational possibilities.

Layout Plan 

The plan is free to copy or download and if you wish, you may use any part of it. 
Do please bear in mind to attribute the work of producing the plan to Dave Bernard (who is an English teacher in Bolivia) and add my link (below) to any article you publish using any of the information. 

Link:- https://www.youtube.com/user/dougattrenholmebar

The plan has been produced using Anyrail5 which can be downloaded free of charge and allows you to view it, however, to modify it you will need to purchase a licence.

David has used some components in the track plan for convenience and it should noted that all track on the 'real' layout is Peco Streamline Code 100. The points (switches) are a mixture of both insulfrog and electrofrog. He used a minimum radius of three feet for the curves, this adds a neatness to the drawing, maybe some of the real ones are a little tighter.   





To download the picture - no software to view required click this link:-

https://www.btcloud.bt.com/?shareObject=60fbfca8-8a42-6e95-c136-686ee1acec05

To download the Anyrail5 file click this link:-

https://www.btcloud.bt.com/?shareObject=6f88e3e2-ade4-e831-b873-7308ed405a01


Thank you David for a superb job. Doug

  




Sunday 16 March 2014



A joint effort 

I have this idea. 

Most people are daunted by the size of the task building a full model railway or don't have the space. 

I thought of making up a specification for a say 3 or 4 foot by 18 inches baseboard which could be joined to another of the same specification and ask as many people who would care to build one (or more) sections and join them together and then filming the end result from on board the trains. 

I intend to build my next layout on this basis and am wondering if anybody would be interested in the idea of a multiple person project. 

There would have to be rules, in order to make something coherent, but it would give those who don't have space or time to build a full layout a contribution to what could be something really good.

Each of the sections could be a discrete diorama, say  a wood yard, a station, a marshalling yard or simply a section with a model of your own house. It would have to be wired for DCC (part of the specification). Each section would require a 'scenic break' to allow the passage from each section.

A small size would allow the section to be built on the kitchen table.

Its an idea anyway, just wonder if anybody out there would be interested......