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... I will also say that I would be interested in some frets of tie plate with N scale spike details and prototypical rail joint plates that I could add to some special trackage close to the front of the layout where I could pose models for pictures. If a line of those was sold separately, ...
But given my n-scale priorities, it’s not necessary for me to be happy.
Micro Engineering made a really GREAT decision (irony) to increase the size of the "spikeheads" on both C40 and C55 flex for added durability I suppose, which in C40, makes it virtually unusable for anything but engines and cars equipped with actual low-profile flanges. This means that such common engines such as Kato F's, Kato E's, Atlas GP-7's and 9's, and many others won't run on it...at all. Their flanges hit each and every spikehead molded into the new C40 flex. The lack of tie plate and spike details on hand laid PCB C40 track really bugs me, so on my foreground mainline trackage, I'm using new Micro Engineering flex with the big inside spike heads carefully sanded down with a NWSL "The Detail Sander" stick. This allows (so far) my test engines to run smoothly without hitting the spikes, and I like the way the track looks better too. I'm considering sanding down the outside spikeheads just for the improved cosmetics.So, it isn't just a matter of having RTR turnouts in C40 to "use" C40 rails on your model railroad. Your choices are very limited. Will you use Micro Engineering C40 flex (and sand down the spike heads so that your engines and cars will actually RUN ON IT?!?...and enjoy the look of having tie plates and spikes on your non-turnout trackage??...Since I am now running only my own trains with low-pros on every car and fairly low-pro flanges on most of my motive power, I am now using ME C40 flex as mainline siding and spur trackage, but with filed-down inside spikeheads. Guests who bring their own trains are warned that only low-pro wheelsets will run on the layout.So, "using code 40 track" is not as simple as it may seem at first, since mere turnout availability doesn't answer all the potential problems.
What engines have you found, if any, that will run on the latest version of ME C40 flex without either having to sand down the spike heads on the track or reduce the depth of the flanges on the engine wheels?
So, "using code 40 track" is not as simple as it may seem at first, since mere turnout availability doesn't answer all the potential problems.
I'd like some decent code 55 turnouts first.
When installing the ME C40 center siding track, I was using a Kato F-3 as my electrical/mechanical test engine. I run an assortment of engines on my layout, all types specific to my ten year time window between 1947 through 1956, so my engines are a combination of brass imports, Kato, Athearn, Atlas, Bachmann, LL and Broadway Limited, including GP-7's, GP-9's, Alco FA/FB's, E's, PA's, F3's, F7's and F9's, Big Boys, FEF's, Light MacArthurs, Harriman Era Consolidations and several early Alco S-series switchers according to U.P.'s odd helper engine assignments up the Wasatch Grade.
Whew, that would be a long list to have to convert to low-profile wheels! Do all those operate properly on NMRA-compliant turnouts?Ed