Corey, I wish I could remember who it is that makes/made the various pax cars, but it is either MDC or Roundhouse for either of them. I don't keep boxes and assembled these some time ago now. Aging memory and all that. Sorry.
I have track lighting in twin 10' tracks that you can get at HD. The white tracks come with separately purchased light fixtures that you press in and rotate a collar to get connection and to fasten them wherever you want them...a nice feature to get good shadows or to illuminate the front or back of something. The lights are mini-halogen GA10's. Hot! Fifty watts each, so that comes to 250 watts per track.
However, the camera, a Canon Powershot 710is, sometimes makes the image a bit yellow when I can't seem to get enough photons slapping the scene. For this image, it was a bit too yellow for my tastes, so I used the Microsoft Photo Editor to brighten it , alter the hue, reduce the saturation, and then to crop the image. More of the closest rails would have been visible and they were getting pretty fuzzy in the original...so out they came, including their surrounding layout surface. I cropped a window casing from the left. And so on.
As a general rule, I crop all my photos. I get tons of light on the area so that my camera will stop down the aperture for light control. It also reduces the exposure, but with the setting I use, it still doesn't keep me from fuzzy images...I prop the camera at "ground level" directly on tracks, a note pad, a piece of extruded foam waste, or on the tripod, and I do absolutely every time use a two second delay on the shutter release so that the camera and support have a chance to settle after I depress the button.
I try to set the camera as far back as I can and take a well-light prefocused shot. Then, to get the proximity that I want for the viewers to see the items well, I crop the image at the periphery to get rid of unwanted spherical aberrations and unfocused objects. When I accept the altered image ("save changes?"), what I kept springs up to full size on the viewer, and it is just as if I had the camera right there and focused.
I hope that is useful for you. Not that you seem to need it.
-Crandell