My First Year in FREMO … Challenge Accepted

Deutsche Version weiter unten, hier klicken. Two weeks ago I “celebrated” my first year in FREMO at my home group meet in Hanau-Großauheim. That meet usually marks the start of my annual FREMO circuit around Germany, where I normally pick two or three meets to visit, operate, and catch up with people along the way. At the H0-RE meet in Rodgau-Dudenhofen, I somehow managed to randomly choose what turned out to be the most demanding assignment of my entire first year in FREMO. The duty covered the two local freight trains Ng 8443 and Ng 8444, both rated difficulty level 3. … Continue reading My First Year in FREMO … Challenge Accepted

FREMO Yardmaster: The Hidden Faces Behind the Operations

Deutsche Version weiter unten, hier klicken. After watching FREMO operations in action for some time, I have come to appreciate what is probably the most important — yet least visible — role behind the scenes: the FREMO yardmaster. The role goes by different names depending on the meet or region. Some call it a shadow-station manager, others a train composition builder. Unlike clearly defined operational roles such as train driver (Lokführer), conductor (Zugführer), signalman or dispatcher (Fahrdienstleiter), or train dispatcher (Zugleiter), there does not seem to be one official title for it. Yet without these people, FREMO operations simply would not … Continue reading FREMO Yardmaster: The Hidden Faces Behind the Operations

Computer-assisted Train Reporting (RgZM) 101

Deutsche Version weiter unten, hier klicken. In this post, I explain how Computer-assisted Train Reporting (RgZM) works, along with my experience as a train controller at the 2025 Luckenwalde and 2026 Hanau-Großauheim meets. In German railway operations, there are two main operating procedures (Betriebsverfahren): Zugmeldebetrieb and Zugleitbetrieb. Understanding the difference between them is important because it explains why RgZM became such a useful tool at our N-RE meets. Zugmeldebetrieb is mainly used on main lines. Train dispatchers at major stations monitor the line sections between neighbouring stations and report trains to each other before they are allowed onto the next … Continue reading Computer-assisted Train Reporting (RgZM) 101

Computer-assisted Train Reporting (RgZM) for Train Movements

Deutsche Version weiter unten, hier klicken. At various FREMO meets, I have seen several different systems used to report train movements between major stations. Telephone communication between train controllers at neighbouring stations is standard practice on the German railways, and we use the same principle in FREMO when offering and accepting trains into the next free block section. Over time, more advanced software systems — many developed by model railway enthusiasts themselves — have helped automate much of this process, reducing telephone calls to a minimum and leaving them mainly as a backup measure. In the photo below from an H0 … Continue reading Computer-assisted Train Reporting (RgZM) for Train Movements