Hi Waldemar,
Very nice images. I showed your pictures to my "partner in crime" and he was convinced you are using the same software he is using to try to document our layout.
You are doing a better job than we did in planning. In fact I do not remeber doing any planning, hmmm....
This ahs lead to us having to re-work some stuff. One of the biggest problems we ran into was that we did not have a large enough tuning radius to be able to turn around 4-8-8-4's and the like. We ended up having to build a large scale compass to re-shape one of our curves.
It looks like you are planning on using fixed track sections and that should help.
I can offer some general advice on the track work. Do some research ahead of time to decide what kind of rail suites your taste and then pruchase everything you will need plus all at one time. Since we went into this as novices, we just picked up some stuff here and there as we went. Since the model rail stuff comes and goes from the market, we have rails and turnouts from a half dozen manufactures.
I would like to also sing the prasies of the "tortise" switch machines. They are worth the cost. We have also experimented with ganging multiple turnouts together and using a single tortise to actuate the set. I dod not plan on doing that again! Next time mutliple tortises in parallel.
Do you know if the software you are using for the "two trains at station" image has an activeX interface?
That could be the solution I am looking for to simplify the next generation of graphics.
The scheduling you mentioned is still a pipe dream for us.
I am concidering "opening up" my code to help drive the model railroading world. I have been developing it such that it is configuration driven and therefor can be used on more than one layout. Its crude but it works.
I anyone is interested in doing an shared project for model railroads, post here and we can talk more.
Ben