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You guys may be right on the earliest cars, but I'm going to prove it to myself. I just found my stash of Kadee blue and black label cars with ribbed-back wheels, and will take them over to the layout tomorrow and see how they run on the track sections in question. The flanges are definitely deep, but they don't strike me as ridiculously deep as the "modern" pizza-cutters do.How early? MSRP of $3.00! On the labels! In the box with these super-early cars were other Kadee cars of similar vintage... where I have already swapped wheels to FVM. Collectors' heads everywhere must be exploding.
The Railwire is not your personal army.
I'll try to do that for you. Main challenge I have is figuring out the ages of some of the fleet on the in-between stuff, which is what prompted the original question. The early cars with Kadee labels are super-easy, the new releases purchased in the past few months, easy, the dozens (...hundreds?... ) picked-up randomly in the '80s, '90s and '00s? Not so much.I'll also comb through the boxes and see if I still have any low-pros with the "optional" pizza-cutters still in the nest.
Would it be possible to see Pics and measurements comparing these wheels? I'm curious about this, I've heard it before but have never seen one of these early mid? pro wheels...
HA! I found a timeline here: http://www.ebay.com/gds/Kadee-Micro-Trains-MTL-1-160-N-Scale-Variations-Guide-/10000000003822658/g.html Scroll down to "Wheel Set Variations".Wow. eBay, of all places. According to the article, low-pro flanges started as an included option in 2002, and thereafter it was just so much schizophrenic craziness and flip-flopping going on until the "standard" flanges in 3/2010. So, Ryan, I'll try to take some pics and measurements, but how they're going to fit within the grand plan I'm not going to be able to nail down. Oh... and rib-backs died in '87.I will make it a point to compare ribbed-backs and later pizza-cutters.
The deep sharp flanges caused no end of problems during operating sessions. Once all cars were retrofitted with the M/T medium flanged wheels most of my problems disappeared.Rod.
FWIK, the first wheelsets produced by Kadee Micro-Trains N scale used molded Delrin axles with blackened white-metal ribbed-back wheels I own one truck with those wheels.
Who cares, they're all still plastic wheels! Standardize on some metal wheelsets and your track will stay cleaner. A big plus for a layout the size you're building.
@pmpexpress That review was done by Neville - he is a member here. He also has few errors in that writeup (regarding the wheels). FWIK, the first wheelsets produced by Kadee Micro-Trains N scale used molded Delrin axles with blackened white-metal ribbed-back wheels I own one truck with those wheels. The next (second) iteration (first in Neville's writeup) used blackened white-metal (not steel) axle with Delrin ribbed-back wheels. Kadee would have not used steel axles because it would mess up magnetic uncoupling.
Mike's point to asking was that he expects the possibility that guests might come and bring their own cars. Many of these guests are set in their ways and running much older MT/Kadee cars which may have the pizza cutter wheel sets. He wanted guidelines so he could make orders to route these cars over specific areas which would avoid problems.
@pmpexpress The next (second) iteration (first in Neville's writeup) used blackened white-metal (not steel) axle with Delrin ribbed-back wheels. Kadee would have not used steel axles because it would mess up magnetic uncoupling.
Interesting! I was just schooled. The ribbed-back wheels have deeper flanges than the classic one-piece pizza-cutters.Both wheelsets have a tread diameter of 0.205" at the flange and 0.202" at the rim. Ribbed-backs' flange diameter is 0.276", corresponding to a tread depth of 0.0355". All-plastic pizza-cutters' flange diameter is 0.272", so tread depth is 0.0335".Does that 0.002" make a difference? Yes, why yes it does. The old wheels will chatter on M.E. C55, and are hopeless on C40. The newer deep-flanges have no issues with M.E. C55, but chatter on C40 and will (still) not negotiate Atlas C55 crossings, at least not well.
From what we've gleaned so far, I'm now waffling between fancy Special Instructions, or just telling the guys "Sorry," that their trains are fine for running on the club's N-Trak roundy-round, but it's the 21st century now and we do things differently. (Oh, that'll make friends. )