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Did you glue the track before or after making the joints? If before, and the rail ends were butted very tightly together, heat from soldering would make the rails expand, but they'd have no place to go, other than up. Also, IIRC, Rapido track is steel, not NS, which would behave differently when heated. Either way, try this: solder the joints before securing the track. If this is not practical, then make sure there is a tiny gap between the rail ends, so the rail has someplace to go as it expands.I'd add one other recommendation: Given the wild swings in temperature and humidity possible in the layout space, leave some of the rail joints unsoldered (say, one set on each level), with small air gaps between the rail ends. This will give the track the ability to respond to the environment. Don't forget, it's not just the track reacting to temperature changes; the wood of the helix is quite unstable, and will expand and contract in response to temperature and especially humidity far more than the track will, particularly if the wood was not "conditioned" to the environment (allowed to sit in the room at least several days before using it).