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If you want any Atlas c55 flex to mess around with, I've got 10 pieces. I'd just need them replaced when the new stock comes available.No joiners or anything as I packed all that with the rest of the code 55 I sold.Jason
Frankly Atlas code 55 turnouts are not as reliable.
I disagree, and if I lived closer to you, I would offer to lay the track for you. To see what you have done with Unitrack is pretty amazing, but Code 55 still looks better and can operate just as reliably.DFF
I thought you had electrical issues with some of yours, no?
I'll make you a deal. Help me find a way to turn down the flanges on a Tomix boxcab I have sitting waiting to be converted to a PRR FF2 and I'll reconsider code 55. I should caveat that i don't even know how to open the damn thing up to put a decoder in it:
Nope. Code 40 is close to 115 lb rail and Code 55 is close to 170 lb rail. Look for yourself: http://www.urbaneagle.com/data/RRrailsizes.html
So I've had this window open for a few weeks (I have a lot of open browser tabs) and couldn't remember why I was here, but I did see the bit about code 40 rail. If my one source from the PRR Facebook group is correct, the PRR used 155lb rail on the mainlines. So the question is, which is better? Code 40 or 55?Again, I refer to Atlas C55 having correct tie spacing. Thoughts?
... Dimensions show an 8" rail height, or 0.50" in N Scale. ...
Mighty tall rail. Ah, that pesky decimal point.Seriously... multi-scale "Code XX" tables I've run across plus other discussions came to a similar conclusion - that heavy Pennsy stuff amounts to roughly Code 55 in N.