Gateway NMRA - St. Louis Model Trains and Model Railroads - Link to Home Page Gateway NMRA - Gateway to Model Railroading Fun

Gateway NMRA - Gateway to Model Railroading FunContact Us Site Map
Gateway to Model Railroading Fun         

Home > Layouts > Hank Kraichely 


Home
Division Events
Article Library
Project Railroads
Model Photos
DCC
Get Stuff
Layout Directory
St. Louis / Links
What's New
About Us

Topic Menu
Layouts A-B
Layouts C-J
Layouts K-O
Layouts P-S
Layouts S-W
Rail Op 2010
Brad Joseph
Phil Bonzon
Bob Buschart
Litchfield
Paul Fries
Hank Kraichely
Bob Johnson
John Schindler
Rick & Venita Lake
Dave Roeder

Hank Kraichely's HO Scale Burlington Route Layout

photos by Richard Schumacher

Hank's layout depicts the St. Louis to Hannibal portion of the CB&Q Railroad’s North Bound main known as the K Line in 1963. The Francis branch running from Old Monroe to Francis is also modeled.

The layout runs through rural areas and has six towns, two cement plants, along with paper, chemical and power plants. There are also two interchanges on the Francis branch, at Wellsville with the Wabash and at Francis with the GM&O. The following commodities are either being shipped into and out of most towns; grain, gasoline, LPG, coal, cattle, farm equipment and consumer goods. There is a factory in Louisiana, Wells Lamont, which receives hides and produces leather gloves. Team tracks are prevalent as are small stations along the main and branch lines. Hank's previous HO layout was featured on the cover of the June 2001 issue of the NMRA Bulletin.

Photo of Hank Kraichely's HO scale model railroad Photo of Hank Kraichely's HO scale model railroad Photo of Hank Kraichely's HO scale model railroad
Photo of Hank Kraichely's HO scale model railroad Photo of Hank Kraichely's HO scale model railroad Photo of Hank Kraichely's HO scale model railroad

Send email to webmaster@gatewaynmra.org with questions or comments about this web site
Copyright © 2010 Gateway Division NMRA, Privacy Policy, Legal Notice, Search, Visitors
This page last updated February 26, 2010


 

Back Home Topic Menu Next