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This is really starting to look good .. did you leave room for all the wiring for things like signals, etc ..
What Barrister Dave said, translated:While there is potential liability to the railroad in the event of a derailment at this S curve situation resulting in personal injury, it is more likely that litigation would be introduced if the "standard" railroad of the world diverged from that standard, resulting in claims of false advertising.
I don't think it would be nasty, because Eric is using #10 turnouts, but it would definitely introduce S-curves into the fold. Unless, of course, you had the main run through the reverse side of the turnout as the easement. That's not the way the Pennsy would have done it, though. The high speeds of the mainline are usually through the normal (straight) route, with the reverse (diverging or curved) side at reduced speed.So, my vote is to keep it as is, except that I see a spot or two on the track on the right (eastbound?) that could use some realignment, especially at the far side of the crossovers, leading into the far curve. Measure the track centers, and you will find it.DFF
I also agree that there appears to be a slight misalignment on the right-hand track at the far end, adjacent to the last switch. However, I believe the camera may be compressing the image and exaggerating what amounts to a trivial misalignment that likely needs no attention.