David Barrow

Q&A with David Barrow on Cat Mountain & Santa Fe

David Barrow
Duration:   1  mins

Description

The linear design of David Barrow’s masterful layout of Cat Mountain & Santa Fe Railway catches many of his new visitors off guard, as this maze-like form of model railroading is rarely utilized. That which surprises the average viewer about David’s layout is also what makes him a true innovator of the hobby, and was the reason why host Allen Keller wanted to visit David’s workshop to see the Santa Fe in action and ask a few questions about model railroading.

In this segment, you’ll discover what pushed David to build his West Texas layout using linear module construction, and get answers to some of the common questions first-time viewers ask about this remarkable HO scale recreation. You’ll learn how David decides which structures to include in his scenery, and find out whether he opts more for scratch-built or kitbashed structures. We hope you enjoy this interview with a master!

Share tips, start a discussion or ask other students a question. If you have a question for the instructor, please click here.

Make a comment:
characters remaining

No Responses to “Q&A with David Barrow on Cat Mountain & Santa Fe”

No Comments
What kind of questions do you get mainly from other model railroaders when they see the railroad?. I think most people are interested in that they have probably not seen. A large model railroad with a linear track design and the walls separating the sense like mine. Do they ever say it feels like we're in a maze, do they count it?. Yes. And then, because the visitor like that is not running the trains and looking at the trains. which would then, you lose that sense I think. The train pulls you to the scene?. Yes. But the visitors haven't seen one that you have to walk around that much to and try to imagine the whole after you finished it, what did I see here. How do you decide which structures to put in the layout?. Oh just aesthetically by. Whatever it goes here. Yes. I have a lot of different ones when I got to know Laurel Joyner the old scale man from San Antonio. He has a masterpiece of a railroad as far as structures and other things go but technically, the quality of the structures and I go through a period where I go down there every once in a while. And then I comeback and look at mine and if I have anything that's not in shouting distance of the looks of the way one of his is, I remove it immediately, and replace it with a white cardboard box until something better comes along So, he is your benchmark then?. That's right. Most of your things kits are scratch built and you said you don't build much of it yourself. I have built some but over the years, different people have built them. It's turned out now to where most everything we have is scratch built or severely kit based in one form or another.
Get exclusive premium content! Sign up for a membership now!