Model Railroad for JavaOne

My husband invited a group of fellow model railroad enthusiasts
(aka “train nuts”) down to our San Jose home yesterday to build
a small, portable, HO-scale model rail line to demonstrate JMRI
software at next week’s
JavaOne Conference
.

JMRI
model railroad interface software controls model trains
and layout accessories such as turnouts or switches, animation,
locomotive speed and direction, and sound. Bob and John and Jon have
been working on JMRI open source with several hundred people all over
the world for many years. John has also been creating open source
model train circuit boards
to interface with JMRI. Yesterday’s group was made up of
those who were available to come to San Jose.

From about ten years’ experience observing and participating in this
obsession (ahem, that is, hobby), model railroaders usually focus on one
of three major categories of passion:

  • Modelling (the scenery, houses, equipment casings, etc.)
  • Operations (running trains on a model layout with timing and
    behavior as much as possible like a real or “prototype” railroad)

  • Computers (the hardware and software that run the trains and the layout)

Yesterday’s group (John, Bob, Jon, and Bob’s son Bear) are definitely
computer-focussed. I think they will
probably get around to adding some ballast, grass, and maybe a tree or
two, but the fun is in the equipment itself. John got the wooden frame
ready in advance. He and the rest worked for about 5 hours yesterday
and left off when they could run a model engine around the loop without
incident.

Yesterday was a bright warm day and the favored task was
anything that involved laying on the warm asphalt of the driveway
in the shade of the layout itself. The first job was to paint the silver
coating of the layout base so it would not blind the workers…

Preparing the frame in advance:

JavaOne layout,
photo: copyright 2006 John Plocher
Bear painting the basecoat:

JavaOne layout,
photo: copyright 2006 John Plocher
Jon painting:

JavaOne layout,
photo: copyright 2006 John Plocher
Bob starting to lay track:

JavaOne layout,
photo: copyright 2006 John Plocher
Outer track loop in place:

JavaOne layout,
photo: copyright 2006 John Plocher
Moving the layout into the shade:

JavaOne layout,
photo: copyright 2006 John Plocher
John soldering track feeds:

JavaOne layout,
photo: copyright 2006 John Plocher
Bob and Jon laying track:

JavaOne layout,
photo: copyright 2006 John Plocher
Working on the wiring (in the shade):

JavaOne layout,
photo: copyright 2006 John Plocher
Jon gluing track:

JavaOne layout,
photo: copyright 2006 John Plocher
John observing the new layout:

JavaOne layout,
photo: copyright 2006 John Plocher
Wires under the layout (with me gardening in the background):

JavaOne layout,
photo: copyright 2006 John Plocher
It takes at least 3 hands to put a Tortoise ™ slow motion
switch in place:

JavaOne layout,
photo: copyright 2006 John Plocher
Bob under the layout:

JavaOne layout,
photo: copyright 2006 John Plocher
Bear enjoying the sound chip and the train controller:

JavaOne layout,
photo: copyright 2006 John Plocher
Jon waiting for the glue to dry:

JavaOne layout,
photo: copyright 2006 John Plocher
Done for today:

JavaOne layout,
photo: copyright 2006 John Plocher
Clean up:

JavaOne layout,
photo: copyright 2006 John Plocher

We meet again in a few days to finish up (and maybe add a little bit
of scenery). Next weekend, we will take the little layout to the Moscone
center for installation in preparation for
JavaOne.

Images by John Plocher (Copyright 2006)

1 Comment

Filed under Caboose Project and Other Trains

One response to “Model Railroad for JavaOne

  1. You should post some of these to the JavaOne Flickr group :

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    I’m sure many people would love to know what goes in behind the scenes. You could also be the first one to post some pictures !
    – Rich

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