0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic.
I was just thinking about it. Four weeks ago my son and I ran for the entire Evanston Roundhouse Festival (2.5 days) and I never noticed any slinky effect. Hmmmm...A way over-rated problem in my estimation.
Slinky effect? I simply put springs on the axles of several cars and Mr. Slinky goes away
A way over-rated problem in my estimation.
Some day you'll have to visit my layout, and see just how ridiculous a long train looks as it slinks its way down Tehachapi Loop. Call me an A-hat, but that isn't the sort of thing that I invest my modeling time & money to see. And no, it definitely is not because of bad wheels, dirty track, car weight, choppy-running locos, or scale headwinds.
I think the slinky effect is primarily an effect of cars being lighter than they could be. Otherwise I just don't understand why some people seem to have different results than I do. I used to have problems with it back in the day when I ran old lightweight Atlas cars with minimal weight in them. Nowadays I only run cars that are more properly weighted (MT, IM, MDC, etc.) and I generally just never see it. If I do see it I add a bit of weight. The only place I ever have a real problem with it these days is cabeese, because they are always at the end of the train, and because I don't want to risking harming my nice cabeese to get weight inside. I will probably try the MT restraining spring at some point, just haven't done so yet.