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Yes, this is true. In the overall view, the code 55 is among the lowest volume product we had (before the production problems) so it is going to get a lower priority on the production schedule. We have been hammering away at the factory to get through our entire product line, and they have been adding additional capacity to their factory to help us. We have been getting a container of track every four weeks, they are going to be increasing that to every three weeks, and the production plan as it stands right now will have just about every HO & N Track SKU shipped at least one time by the end of July. That does not mean it will not change if there is an issue with a given piece of tooling. As Cory stated, we have not given QC approval to start production on the code 55 flex track, and we won't until it is up to our standards.
At what point does hand laying turnouts become an option? That's my question at this point.
Yes, but:(1) That was a couple of years ago, and the track shortage has only gotten worse since then by the trickle of track products becoming available and the many purchases (especially large orders like yours) since then.(2) You probably paid more than what you would have under normal circumstances. I have bought most of my track from MBK, because they generally have had the best pricing. To buy anywhere else means a bigger hit to the wallet. Besides, I would like to think that if you had placed one order for 200 pieces of flextrack and more than 120 turnouts, you could have also requested and possibly received a further discount for the bulk purchase. Sidenote: I'm concerned for the price of track parts when it becomes available, due to simple supply and demand.(3) Look at the extra effort it required you to go through multiple orders and different vendors to find what you needed. That extra effort that shouldn't be required, and for some of us, we just don't have that kind of time or the time can be better spent on other things.DFF
At what point does hand laying turnouts become an option? That's my question at this point. If I had invested the dollars and time back last July to begin making my own, I might have most of my needs for turnouts filled by now. I'm still waiting unfortunately.I gave up on waiting on flextrack though, and am using Micro Engineering, which looks just as good, if not better, than Atlas C55 flex. There are other options on the market, and no one is holding any of us hostage to the supply problems that Atlas has experienced. I know they are doing their best to bring product back to the market, but even when items start hitting the shelves I still expect flex and turnouts to be in short supply because of pent up demand.
It's a learned skill you'll never regret having...never.
It kinda slaps me across the face whenever I read "Code 55 wasn't/isn't available" because it IS and has been all along...just not Atlas 55. Micro Engineering's flex has been available throughout the drought of Atlas 55, as well as their single turnout, a true #6. I'm not going to get deep into the cosmetic and operational problems that Atlas turnouts and flex have which the ME #6 does NOT have and ME flex doesn't have either. Back before Atlas jumped into the N-scale code 55 business, I know several excellent modelers who build their entire layouts and modules using nothing but ME flex and ME #6's...with a couple of hand-laid turnouts (that I built for them) thrown in.Also, it slaps me again across the face when poster just assume that to build their own turnouts, they're required to buy Fast Tracks jigs & fixtures...for approximately $300, before they can build turnouts on the bench or in place. NOT TRUE...with the plethora of information out there online nowadays about how to build turnouts, nobody "needs" any jigs or fixtures to hand-lay their own turnouts.Of course, Fast Tracks stuff makes it easier, but myself and several other N-scalers here in Utah have been building our own turnouts since the early '80's with nothing more than hand tools and printed or drawn turnout diagrams.IF you want to save a sh*tload of money, then "rolling" your own turnouts is the way to go. If you want more reliable, better looking turnouts, then rolling your own is the way to go. If you want to do away with almost all of your restrictions in layout design related to turnouts and/or diamonds, then rolling your own is the way to go. If you never want to be held hostage for years waiting while the geopolitical/business problems in China are resolved, then roll your own.Yeah, they take more time to build than ordering RTR turnouts does, or taking a trip to your LHS and buying what you need, as well as an investment in time and effort to learn how to do it, and maybe you don't possess the skills or attitude to roll your own, or you just hate any trackwork. Even at that, it ain't rocket-science and the effort is less than superdetailing a diesel and painting it before you get your first viable turnout.So, right now is the time to think outside the box, bite the bullet and learn how to hand lay your own turnouts. It's a learned skill you'll never regret having...never.