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I didn't think they took advanced reservations or preorders.
Hey Paul,Any update on the #10's Still waiting Hope they are here soon so i can get some work done this winter!!!Thanks
It ain't rocket science...build your own turnouts and never (NEVER) not have the turnouts you need again...ever...Since Atlas starting having China problems, I've made several dozen turnouts, continued laying my code 55 and code 40 track (Railcraft, ME & handlaid PCB) and just continued on like normal, workin' on my layout.Frankly, the only reason I even know that Atlas has China problems is because I read it here. I don't have a need for commercial turnouts, so it's irrelevant to my experience of the hobby.I'm not gloating, and reading the frustration in this thread and in others compels me to offer a viable solution...a "cure" if you will, which is "Roll your own".Bob Gilmore
Everyone has different skill sets. Hand laying isn't everyone's cup of tea. It certainly isn't mine. And I like doing track work.
You're entirely correct...sort of... I certainly am not proposing that hand laying turnouts is for everybody, but it certainly IS for more people than actively do it.Since I don't have anything else to do right now, I'll take my time and explain...I started hand laying code 55 turnouts when Railcraft C55 flex was available, but there were zero C55 turnouts being made..by anybody, anywhere. I would have preferred to have purchased my C55 turnouts, but after I taught myself how to make them (because that was the only way I was going to get them)...after four throw-away attempts that didn't work properly and looked like trash...I started to see the advantages to being able to make turnouts that simply were not available in ANY rail code in N-scale...plus, my turnouts looked better, functioned better and were more reliable than any manufactured turnouts...and I could make 'em for around $1.75 ea., in an hour.My only guide was Gordy Odegaards MR article about how he hand laid his C40 Pliobond N-scale turnouts on wooden ties...and a centerfold in an old N-scale magazine showing various prototype turnouts as my guide for their proportions and tie placement. No Fast Tracks jigs, fixtures or specialized tools.I did it because of product unavailability 30 years ago. Relating that to this post and the past couple of years, a two year absence of N-scale C55 track products is also "unavailability". If you're content to wait for some unspecified period until the China factories get it right before you lay track and run trains again, that's fine. BUT, if you want to start laying track and running trains in a couple of weeks, then learn how to roll your own turnouts...without the expensive Fast Tracks products to (1) find out if you've got the capability, (2) find out if you like doing it and (3) are willing to sacrifice about an hour per turnout to get trains going on your layout. There are plenty of resources online to show you how to do it.If Atlas starts stocking dealers soon, then BUY what you need, but, your newfound turnout building skills will really come in handy when you need a couple of #12 curved turnouts on that curved yard throat lead, or if you need a pair of #9 wyes for that center siding...or an offset three-way for the engine facilities...then you can make 'em...turnouts that are probably NEVER going to be commercially produced.I think it gives the model railroader much more freedom to make his layout the way HE wants to do it, rather than be subservient to what any manufacturer decides is best for him, or continue to be subject to the economic/political uncertainties and contortions of China.Just sayin'...Cheerio!Bob Gilmore
An hour of my time is worth $100 as that is what i could be making teach a golf lesson.
I'm not sure that I agree with equating hobby time with time spent earning money. ...
Agreed. That said, be sure to check the point hinges on your Atlas turnouts before you install them. I've had cases where the retaining grommet falls out and then there is nothing holding the point rail down. If that happens after you install it, you're pretty much forced to remove the tunout to repair or replace. It's easy enough to check: just try to gently pry the grommet off with tweezers - it will easily pop off if it's failure prone. I hope the new turnouts don't have this potential flaw.
Being "in the autumn of my years", time is increasingly precious. Bob's concept of spending an hour or more per turnout doesn't wash when the track plan calls for four to five hundred turnouts.
Back when I used those turnouts I put a smear of silicone on those ring clips so they couldn't fall out. Because... had it happen to me too.