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Nope. I could be a "pizza cutter" ignorer if I just ran them instead of choosing to run what are the smallest effective and commercially available flanges, but there's not a pizza cutter on my layout, each wheel being equipped with the lowest practical flange I can get or turn.The equivalent of your "flange ignorer" would be a "rail ignorer". Not a "code 80 ignorer" which involves ignoring tie height, tie width, tie length, spikehead details, rail height, rail profile, track floppiness (a contributor to Dave's cut problem), prominent nail holes and most importantly, the fact that there is better looking, and equally well-functioning commercially available track out there.Ignoring flanges only involves ignoring their height.
I think that while everybody is getting hung up on the rail height, tie dimensions and spacing, nobody is paying any attention to the oversized molded plastic spikes. While ME seems to make the smallest spikes, they are still not to scale...
All I can vouch for is my own experience. My code 55 in Enola looks fantastic, but backing a 22-car coal drag down the yard ladder is not an experience I relish.
Dave. Now you've opened another can of worms. Do you have all truck mounted couplers or body mounted couplers. Truck mounted couplers are known to cause derailments during reverse or backup moves.
I still say your repair job looks great, UniTrack or not. It's hard enough to make a repair, even using the same kind of track. That you were able to do it with completely different track and have it look more or less unnoticeable from the surrounding bits is pretty good work IMO.
I'm getting much better at track soldering, but I need more practice. I used to ham-fist with a 100/140 W gun. I'm smarter than that now... . I have a nice professional 15 W pencil-tip iron.
Mike C,Although it is admittedly tedious to paint the concrete ties, it isn't difficult. I reached the point where I could manage three feet of double-track in one sitting before having to take a break. (I painted mine at the workbench prior to installation.) It isn't real obvious in the second view due to the camera angle, but that is the super-elevated curve section.Ron