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Ron,This is a good write up, but I have always used the six jumpers that you referenced. You don't even have to open the turnouts. Solder the jumpers on the ends to the underside of the rails.I used them like this for many years.My recent loss of function in my hands has made me leave N Scale, so I no longer have examples to show, but I'll happily answer questions if this isn't clear.Don
Those are really excellent pictures that I am bookmarking in case I ever need to open one of these.But, I just provide power feeders to all 4 tracks connecting to this turnout, and never have any problems. In effect, they are doing the same thing as your internal jumpers. I would think you could do the same with external jumpers, with less risk of messing up the innards. But, if you really were having problems with the press fit of the tabs used to route power as the turnout is thrown, then this procedure does address that nicely.One comment about your 2-wire-only feed to power your whole layout: The slow downs and speed ups that you were experiencing are a good indication that you need more feeders to your loops. Yes, these jumpers will smooth out the differences by removing the electrical gap that separated 2 sections of rail in a path, and even increase the voltage a bit by providing 2 parallel paths to every point on a loop, but I expect that there will be substantial voltage drops at the farthest track distance from your feeder wires, because the track and rail joiners are not going to conduct as well as a bus wire. At least that was the effect on my 2-loop 9' x 3-1/2' test layout made with Unitrack.Even if the resulting slow-downs are not noticed or not annoying, the voltage drops may (or may not) interfere with your overcurrent protection. I suggest that you at least do the "quarter test" and short your rails at various locations around all of your loops to make sure that your power source trips its connection to the rails. If it does not, then you should add some more feeders until it always does. Otherwise, an unnoticed short on the track could cause a hot spot that can damage track and/or equipment. The hot spot does not even need to be at the location of the short - it might be (mostly) on the loosest rail joiner between your feed point and the short.