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    best way to support elevated plates? —Joe Strout
   We're thinking about raising up half of our town, so that we can have the train run into a tunnel and be a subway train on the elevated half and a surface train on the other half (with the two halves joined by a hill). This will also allow us to (...) (20 years ago, 12-May-05, to lugnet.build, lugnet.town)
   
        Re: best way to support elevated plates? —Larry Lesser
     For my town I took the arches from the SAH site. Imagine looking at the baseplate. I placed two going north, one going east and west on the front and then depending on where they are in the tunnel I may have a total of 8 arches two in each (...) (20 years ago, 12-May-05, to lugnet.build, lugnet.town)
   
        Re: best way to support elevated plates? —Larry Pieniazek
     (...) Consider GMLTC lattice. Strong, light, made of common elements and modular in that it conforms to various heights well. XFUT lugnet.trains... a search with this string "GMLTC lattice" should find you a pic of it... (20 years ago, 12-May-05, to lugnet.build, lugnet.town, lugnet.trains)
    
         Re: best way to support elevated plates? —Joe Strout
     (...) Sounds like what I'm after. Unfortunately, a search for "GMLTC lattice" didn't turn up any posts, except for yours, with both words in it. I also tried the same search at brickshelf, with no luck. Can anyone point me to a picture or more (...) (20 years ago, 12-May-05, to lugnet.trains)
    
         Re: best way to support elevated plates? —Larry Pieniazek
      (...) Sorry for the bum steer. (it was under honeycomb not lattice, my bad) Try this post: (URL) which leads you to this pic: (URL) should set you right. (20 years ago, 12-May-05, to lugnet.trains)
     
          Re: best way to support elevated plates? —John Neal
      (...) And check out (URL) pic> and (URL) pic> to see that method in action. Ironically, we just completely cannibalized that module last week... Wanna buy some 2x2 towers? :-) JOHN (20 years ago, 12-May-05, to lugnet.trains, FTX)
     
          Re: best way to support elevated plates? —Joe Strout
      Thanks to both, that's very interesting. It's much denser than I had in mind; and though 2x2 and 2x4 bricks are dirt cheap, it would use a LOT of them. I'm not sure if it would actually come out cheaper or not, but it's certainly worth considering. (...) (20 years ago, 12-May-05, to lugnet.trains, FTX)
     
          Re: best way to support elevated plates? —John Neal
      (...) I will say that, although we still have 4 modules with this kind of construction that we will keep together for the forseeable future, we have abandoned that building style. Those GMLTC-style modules of ours are/were 30" x 45" (2X3 large gray (...) (20 years ago, 12-May-05, to lugnet.trains, FTX)
    
         Re: best way to support elevated plates? —Jan-Albert van Ree
     (...) For 1000Steineland 2003 Klaas Meijaard and myself built a huge pirate layout, that had to cover up 3 train tracks. We used a combination of brick+technic framework (all 2*4 and 2*8 bricks, and technic 1*16's for long beams across) with loads (...) (20 years ago, 13-May-05, to lugnet.trains)
   
        Re: best way to support elevated plates? —Ted Michon
     (...) Joe- At SCLTC, we build tunnels and subterranean structures by stacking tables on top of each other using short legs and knobs bolted to the tops of the underlying tables. We haved stacked as tables as high as 5 levels in one place when (...) (20 years ago, 12-May-05, to lugnet.build, lugnet.town)
   
        Re: best way to support elevated plates? —Chris Gray
     (...) If you have lots of spare 2x4 bricks, then you can use the same technique we used at the 2002 GETS show: (URL) does use *lots* of 2x4 brick, and a few others, and you have to be quite careful to not leave large fractures in the structure, but (...) (20 years ago, 13-May-05, to lugnet.build, lugnet.town)
   
        Re: best way to support elevated plates? —Mike Gallagher
   (...) I’m working on some multi level displays with members of COLTC. Here is some ideas that I have come up with. The main thing was cost then sturdiness. I use 8x16 soccer bricks that were real cheap. Then place our Base plates on them. I have (...) (20 years ago, 13-May-05, to lugnet.build, lugnet.town, FTX)
 

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