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Hi peteski,Here is the idea; Think springs on the tops of the wheels.Find a way to mount a pick-up that contacts the top of the wheelsand that presses down the wheelsit will take some trial to get the right amount of spring.I have found a little is good and a lot is bad.glory awaits you.victor
I've never seen it done in N scale, but it has in larger scales, and may have in N - track sliders. Make a sliding shoe to sit between the wheels on each side of each truck. The idea is to have a larger contact area, meaning more reliable contact, which can't be done with a round wheel.
I've never seen it done in N scale, but it has in larger scales, and may have in N - track sliders. ...
Didn't the Atlas loco (was it Rivarossi?) also have some idler axles (which would be ideal as a springing electric pickups)? It was also much heftier than the 44-tonner.
Yes, the Atlas/Rivarossi E8 but also the C-Liner, and by extension, possibly some early Euro models.The entire front truck was idler axles. (Only the two rear axles were powered.)
Maybe the glory isn't for me. Sounds like your solution is an 8-wheel independent suspension. Softly sprung too. Good theory, but if someone can put this theoretical musing it won't be me. But thanks for sharing - I did ask for it. That is not realistic on a fairly lightweight model (even with tungsten weight added. The springs would have to be really soft. Plus, if the springs are soft enough to allow the model to float on them, the torque from driving the wheels would either push the wheels up or down (depending on the direction of travel). Good idea but not really achievable (at least in my view).
I am pretty sure what I think I said was not what you heard.well on to other things.victor
Did it work well enough to consider for a modern light-weight model, or was the mechanism so bad that one couldn't tell?