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QuoteThe n scale supply chain can be maddening.Understatement of the year! Looking good, keep 'em coming!
The n scale supply chain can be maddening.
WOW ,.. it makes my head hurt just tracing this vortex
Nice to see updates in your thread again, Gary.
<snip>At the time, it raised a question that I never found the answer to: what happens when you have two adjoining independent reversing sections? If they start off with the opposite polarity, why don't the two reversers duke it out in an infinite loop of simultaneous polarity switching? This may be an unlikely scenario, but not a forbidden one, as far as I can tell. <snip>
(Someone please correct me if when I'm wrong about anything here...)
This is a view from the terminal manager's pit looking across the back wall (garage door) towards the storage yard. The track at bottom is coming out of Bakersfield; the segment A-A' is the mainline to Edison, taking one loop around the race track to gain elevation; the segment B is the direct connection between Bakersfield (north staging) and the storage yard; and the segment C-C'-C'' is the other connection between the storage yard and the south staging helix (above C'').
jagged ben, you may be right. I think, though, that this picture shows otherwise:I think in this picture, segment B is one leg of the wye coming off the main trunk and segment C is the other leg coming off the main trunk in the other direction. Regards,--Brandon--