I see this is where my ignorance of rail operations is going to come shining through. Please do forgive me. A "line" that butts up to an industry or business that requires rail support is then called a spur? I'll use two different examples to cover a wide range of potentials. An industry such as a newspaper company that takes delivery of massive rolls of paper via a box car and a mining operation. For the newspaper operation how then does the paper product get from the main line to the business? Would the product be dropped at a rail yard then a short line operation move the product to the business? A mining operation would fill ore cars for processing on a "spur". Once the consist had been completed how then would that consist make it's way to a processing plant. Would the consist roll on the main with a dedicated loco or would the operator of the Class One line delegate how the ore got to its processing plant? I guess the bigger question here is might there be a good book detailing rail operations at a basic level that I should read. Suddenly the idea of putting together a layout seems slightly more complicated...if I wish for it to resemble something close to an actual rail operation.