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Doug,In my 15 3/4 inch radius helix, I am offsetting the rails the same way Gary shows but I remove one tie at each joint (ME Code 40) and use a half-length rail joiner. It takes time to cut the joiners but the half-length one holds the rail in alignment well and doesn't introduce as much of a kink as a full length joiner.Cheers,
Geez Greg, who uses Code 40 inside a helix??! Are you kidding me?Love your work, Otto K.
- snip -The 40/80 transition is easy. Just file a notch in the top of the C80 rail and solder the C40 to it! It also works with 55/80, but not so well with 40/55. There I used the old "smashed rail joiner" trick, or, in several places, just aligned the rails, as the transition was at a natural gap anyway.
I had plenty of Code 40 flex on hand and it was easier than bothering to transition from Code 40 to Code 80 and then back to Code 40 again! It also provides an extra scale foot of "finger clearance" between the railhead and the sub-roadbed for the next turn - particularly useful when trying to stay at a maximum gradient of 2.25% within the physical constraint of a 400 mm (approx. 15 3/4") radius. In my "Givens & Druthers", "people space" in that area is more important to me than increasing the diameter of the helix as the station at the bottom of the helix is the major switching location on the layout and is also a train order station - thus a site of "people congestion".Cheers,