Not sure if this goes here or in the Scenery forum .... I'm making some track from C55 rails and I know you use PC strips soldered to the rails at intervals. Do you glue the wooden ties that go between them to the rail before you lay the track? Or glue the ties to the roadbed (with gaps where the PC ties go) then lay the track on them?
Here's how I do my Code 40 track:
(1) I make a jig about 3' long that I can place my N-scale wooden ties in so that they're properly spaced, with a missing tie every 5th tie.
(2) I draw a track centerline carefully where I want my track to go on my sanded subroadbed.
(3) I lay Midwest Cork Products N-scale Cork Roadbed carefully to the drawn centerline on my subroadbed, gluing it down with a quality yellow carpenter's glue and using a 2" wide wooden seam roller to flatten the cork against the subroadbed, and I scoop up any excess glue with a palette knife.
(4) After the yellow carpenter's glue has dried sufficiently...usually around 15 to 20 minutes...I sand the top of the cork roadbed with a sanding block I've made from a straight pine 1X2 with 220 grit sandpaper and I break the ragged edge where the cork roadbed's angled sides meet the top.
(5) I vacuum up the cork dust
(6) I draw adjacent lines on either side of the centerline of the cork roadbed so that these lines are very close to a tie length wide.
(7) I place wooden ties in the jig
( 8 ) I cut a piece of masking tape that's a little longer than the ties sitting in the jig, and 1/4" wide.
(9) I press this piece of masking tape down on the ties in the jig and burnish the tape so that it's stuck pretty good to the ties in the jig
(10) I then spread some yellow carpenter's glue between the two lines drawn on the cork roadbed using a cheap acid brush I buy in bulk at Harbor Freight Tools
(11) I then go to the jig where the tape is stuck to the tops of the ties near their centers, and lift these ties out of the jig.
(12) I carefully lay these ties (still attached to the 1/4" wide strip of masking tape) so that their ends are between the two lines drawn on the cork
(13) I carefully wipe the glue from between the ties where the missing fifth tie is located so that there's very little yellow carpenter's glue there
(14) I let this dry overnight, or speed it up with a hair dryer
(15) I glue in my PCB ties using gap-filling CA and Accelerator, pressing each one down until the glue sets off after a squirt of Accelerator
Note: I've pre-gapped my PCB ties on BOTH SIDES...down the middle on the bottom and randomly on top with a fine oval jeweler's file removing as little copper as possible and getting rid of any burrs with a small steel welder's brush. PCB ties that have been CUT sometimes have burrs on the edges, so make sure this is gone with a file or scraping it with an X-acto knife.
(16) Since my wooden ties are thicker than my PCB ties, I now carefully sand the wooden ties down until my sanding block is just starting to scratch the copper surface of the PCB ties
Note: Use a 320 or 400 grit sandpaper or emery paper to do this. With a scrap piece of rail make sure that both wooden ties and PCB ties are the same height by laying the rail over several PCB ties and the wooden ties in between them. You definitely DO NOT WANT to sand away any copper cladding from the PCB ties, so be careful here.
I use three three-point code 40 track gauges I get from Micro Engineering and I start laying track by putting both rails down at the same time with them centered between the tie ends.
(17) After you've centered your rails on the ties, solder your rails to the PCB ties every fifth tie for 3 PCB ties. I use Superior No. 30 Supersafe Gel Flux and 96/4 Tin/Silver Solder for this. Buy the stuff here:
https://www.hnflux.com/ I have laid a lot of track using my old Realistic 35W soldering iron, making sure the tip is always clean and tinned.
(18) If you're happy with this first start, then continue onward, using templates or the Mk I Eyeball Method to get straight and nicely curved rails. With Code 55, it should be pretty easy, since the rail is markedly stiffer than Code 40
(19) Stagger the rail ends and use a double set of PCB ties at these ends with the rail ends meeting between ties, not on them. No need for any rail joiners as long as you put a feeder on each and every piece of rail before painting, weathering and ballasting and thoroughly test each section before doing any painting.
I don't stain my wooden ties, but I paint them with rattle-can Krylon Ultra Flat Camo Black first, then a thin coat of Krylon Ultra Flat Camo Brown sprayed vertically downward...just barely covering the ties and getting a bit of overspray on the rail webs. I pick out several ties every 6" or so with various shades of brown, tan and grey to add variety.
That's a lot of steps, but it yields pretty good looking Code 40 track, and it should do it for Code 55 too, and it goes quickly.
Photo (1) - Here's a photo of my Park City Branch at Echo Curve laid using the above method in Code 40: