"No way!" exclaimed Mike Helde as a train engine exited a long tunnel and headed for the Stone Arch Bridge in Minneapolis.
The reason for his surprise: "It went through with no sparks," said Peter Southard.
That's a good thing when it comes to reassembling the tracks for a 16- by 30-foot model-train layout. Everything has to fit back together just so for the train to run smoothly. And, "there's something about tunnels that makes it harder to work on it," Southard said.
After all, the tunnels are only a few inches tall and wide, along with sundry buildings and landscaping on the large model-train diorama that re-creates a vintage Minneapolis scene. But while the devil is in the details, as the old bromide goes, the truly hellish work on the large layout already had been done:
It began with a cross-country trip from California that required cutting a 10-foot-square segment out of a house, guiding the layout's pieces through it and then down 15 feet onto the ground, and toting them onto a 53-foot truck for the long trek to Minnesota.
That's what the Twin City Model Railroad Club just accomplished, bringing a slice of Minneapolis life to St. Paul from Santa Barbara, Calif. -- even if in miniature form.
"That was the hardest part by far, just getting it out of the house, dealing with the scaffolding and the scissors lift and then a narrow walkway," said Chad Kono, who journeyed to California last month for the project. "Two or three of those sections were really heavy."
He added, "We also had to take a lot of pictures so we could remember where everything went."