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East Haven Raceway

Posted:
Sat Sep 08, 2012 5:48 pm
by RichD
This is East Haven Raceway, it is a 4X16 foot MaxTrax. EHR will be hosting its annual Sizzler race for the 11th year in a row in October.

A recent innovation has been racing under the lights.

Re: East Haven Raceway

Posted:
Sat Sep 08, 2012 8:34 pm
by dreinecke
Wow! That looks fantastic! I really love the lights too! Did you make those?
Re: East Haven Raceway

Posted:
Sun Sep 09, 2012 10:51 am
by reel55
Really looks like fun racing at night!!!!!
Verne
Re: East Haven Raceway

Posted:
Mon Sep 10, 2012 9:35 am
by RichD
Re: East Haven Raceway

Posted:
Mon Sep 10, 2012 2:40 pm
by reel55
Thanks for the link to the making of the lights -Very interesting and inventive!!!!!!!
Verne
Re: East Haven Raceway

Posted:
Sun Nov 11, 2012 3:37 pm
by GenevaDirt
That is just awesome...love the track design....but the night track just puts it over the top
Re: East Haven Raceway

Posted:
Sun Nov 11, 2012 9:25 pm
by HRWJim
I really like the lights. Jim
Re: East Haven Raceway

Posted:
Mon Nov 12, 2012 9:15 pm
by dge467
The track looks like a blast to race on! Looks great under the lights!
Re: East Haven Raceway

Posted:
Tue Nov 13, 2012 8:11 am
by ListerStormGT
Very cool, the lights look great!
Re: East Haven Raceway

Posted:
Tue Nov 13, 2012 8:34 am
by RichD
The lights turned out to be more popular than I expected. One of the Shoreline racers even added lights to his 1/32nd track. I have to leave a couple of small room lights on when we run with the lights, but someone suggested that blue Christmas lights are good for simulating moonlight, so I will be looking for some of those.
Re: East Haven Raceway

Posted:
Tue Nov 13, 2012 3:03 pm
by Wolseley Hornet
The night shot looks very good,Rich.
You obviously don't want to re make all those lights.
I've been deliberating a bit about lights, and I wonder if white LED's are a bit too white/bright/blue.
I do think blue lights would give a simulation of moonlight, but these might be best used as room background lighting, with yellow LED's over the track itself; to give the same character to the light as in Edward Hopper's Night Hawks painting.
And it's not just Hopper. If you Google "Urban night painting" and look at images,artificial light always seems to have a yellowish tone, even though you know,seen full-size, they were bright white lights.
Excuse me ruminating "out loud" in your thread, but I'm trying to sort out a clear view of my next project but one.
David.
Re: East Haven Raceway

Posted:
Wed Nov 14, 2012 7:19 am
by RichD
The track lights are fine, I just wanted something to put on the ceiling so I wouldn't need to use any room lights. It probably would have been better if I had used a few more sets of lights, the lighting is not totally uniform like it is with modern tracks. The poles are 16 inches apart, 14 inches apart would probably be perfect.
Re: East Haven Raceway

Posted:
Wed Nov 14, 2012 2:26 pm
by Wolseley Hornet
You may be right, although the shadows between the lights add some 'atmosphere', and I'm sure drivers can still see well enough to race.
David.
Re: East Haven Raceway

Posted:
Wed Nov 14, 2012 6:55 pm
by waaytoomuchintothis
David, you amaze me. I'm a Hopper fan from waaay back. And you are right about the shade of light making the difference in scenery. I saw an "O" Gauge train layout that was the entire second floor of a five car garage, and in the urban area, he had used Night Hawks as a guide for the shade of lamplight, using completely different shades for open plains, still another shade for canyons and gorges with huge trestles, and he incorporated different shades of fluorescent lights behind valances to give the light appropriate to time of day, from yellow at dawn through white daylight to deep reds and blues at sunset, and dim blue for night. It was spectacular.
Re: East Haven Raceway

Posted:
Thu Nov 15, 2012 2:38 am
by Wolseley Hornet
Thank goodness - I thought I might have been indulging in too much navel-gazing.
But seriously,I think that after all the effort, and inspiration that many people put into their tracks,poor lighting means that photos don't do them justice.
Conversely,I've noticed with my own tracks that in some photographs they can look quite good, and then,when you see them in the flat bright light of the garage, they can look quite dull.(I hope there's more to this than just brain levels of serotonin!).
I just wish I knew a bit more about it - lighting theory,that is.
David.