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I'm new at posting to this board and so please bear with me. ... and have now settled for liquid cleaning followed by the light use of 4B graphite applied with a stick or pencil. This idea was passed on to me by folks operating a large HO scale club in my southwestern Ontario region and so it was given a try on my medium sized layout built in 1:160 using codes 55 and 40 rail. Graphite is quite conductive as a 4B stick set across the rails will quickly prove. My graphite items were purchased at Michaels. The 4B has enough clay in the mix to act as a binder for the graphite (6B may have a little too much 'clay gum' and 'smear' I suspect). This 4B mix will not fall off both contact surfaces, wheel and rail, and this graphite application has significantly improved my experience with electrical operating reliability while reducing the need to clean rail as often of dust, tarnish etc.
I'm new at posting to this board and so please bear with me. Thanks. This is a fascinating discussion re conductivity of electricity from track to wheel on whatever locomotive power we are working with, whether artfully scratch built or purchased ready to go. My thoughts re the fine conversationexamiing the mechanical and electrical construction involved lean me toward the problem possibly residing mostly in the quality of the electrical aspect of rail /wheel contact that weight added does help. My guess is that discussions about track cleaning alone could produce a book with considerable heft to it. Like many, I have tried a variety of cleaners and non- destructive friction cleaning devices/materials (OK, sometimes that rule was ignored!) and have now settled for liquid cleaning followed by the light use of 4B graphite applied with a stick or pencil. This idea was passed on to me by folks operating a large HO scale club in my southwestern Ontario region and so it was given a try on my medium sized layout built in 1:160 using codes 55 and 40 rail. Graphite is quite conductive as a 4B stick set across the rails will quickly prove. My graphite items were purchased at Michaels. The 4B has enough clay in the mix to act as a binder for the graphite (6B may have a little too much 'clay gum' and 'smear' I suspect). This 4B mix will not fall off both contact surfaces, wheel and rail, and this graphite application has significantly improved my experience with electrical operating reliability while reducing the need to clean rail as often of dust, tarnish etc.
This is an interesting idea, but I have some questions.How do you handle cleaning the track after applying the graphite? I would think that any wiping, whether with liquids or mild abrasives, would remove the graphite easily. Do you reapply it every time you clean?What about graphite accumulating on the wheels of the engines and rolling stock? Yes, it is conductive, but it's not as conductive as clean brass or nickel.How long have you been running trains on an N Scale layout treated with graphite like this? I ask because I'm wondering about long-term effects. For example, maybe the graphite mixes with moisture and dirt after a long time and starts making some crud that is hard to clean. Believe me, I'm very intrigued by your idea of using graphite, but I'd like to know more about its behavior.