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Back in the early 1970s I helped a friend install switchstand turnout throws on Shinohara code 70 turnouts.They were scaled down "Slanzer" (the NMRA author) throws made from music wire and K&S brass tubing. The plans came from an NMRA "Bulletin" from the same decade.The throw had a 270 degree rotation with sprung pressure to the points and also provided selected electrical power to the points/frog.The parts were mass prefabricated and could be mounted to a block to ease installation. The handle above the layout could be made near scale and targets/lantern added for appearance.Charlie Vlk
I think you're going to run into issues with Shapeways' FXD minimums, if that's your benchmark. A variation of this idea of this may work better in etched metal. The solid rack-and-pinion is good work and would result in something durable. But Lennart is right, the biggest challenge is 90° end stops and spring connection between the throwbar and post for the overtravel to flex for the stops.It stopped raining, so I need to get my butt out of the house and over to the studio to take those pictures.
Nope. That's already designed to SW minimums. The radii in the tip of each tooth is R0.2mm, although I have not sent it for an official SW pass. Ask yourself if you really are worried about the target face being perfectly perpendicular to the track. In reality my design is adjustable, the rack can slide on the throwbar until you have it where you want it. Or as I mentioned, the targets could be glued in place after install. Then as Long as you alive 90 degrees of radial travel the other target face shot in turn be perpendicular. If you gear it properly, there's should be no need for stops. You just need 90 degrees of axial rotation for 2.?mm of lateral movement in the points. That is the biggest obstacle for a geared design. But in reality you have already achieved that with a lever. The etched gear is a good idea too. What you see is merely conceptual and actually is quite small.
... Mike, do you have a picture of your servo setup? If you could get just a little more throw ...
I used to get my SS hypo-tubing from Small Parts Inc. They had a *HUGE* selection of those and lots of other useful items. But several years ago they got absorbed into Amazon and it is a format shadow it itself (and last time I tried to shop on their website was not fun). N-gineering has some of that tubing too, but you can always Google "stainless steel hypodermic tubing" for some additional sources.
I see. I actually like that assembly for powering, though. If you laid it out I'll bet you could come up with a small pivot on the adjacent fixed tie, driven by the throw bar, with a decent length pigtail extending away from that pivot to the stand to amplify the motion that the stand sees. That could be bent at the pivot to change the direction (90 degrees back maybe?) and keep it aimed in the desired direction of the stand's mounting window. The 90 quadrant in the stand could be oriented to whatever position the amplifying spring arm wound up in. If it was from small, maybe .010" or less music wire, it could have a little bit of over travel built in to handle variations from different turnout travels while driving the stand into a fixed stop. The flex in the spring wire would assure accurate full travel and accommodate errors that might do damage. This method might lend itself to some Shapeways parts, too.One way might be to engage the throw bar from underneath, over to the bottom side of the adjacent tie, up through a drilled hole, and then bent down in the direction of your stand with a long whisker that ultimately drives the stand at some distance away and therefore plenty of travel. Lay it out and see if that might not be a viable approach. Another option you have with these ties is they are solvent weldable so you might even be able to make your pivot assembly from ABS or styrene on the bench as a sub assembly and then position it to the tie and solvent weld it in place. No flaky glue or CA joints.There's gotta' be a way!
This is an NJ International switch stand connected to a peco switch, so that the switch stand would rotate when you threw the switch (by pushing the rails with a finger - the switch stand wasn't strong enough to actually throw the switch). I had to drill an extra hole in the rod on the switch stand to make it the right length so that it would rotate 90 degrees in response to the peco throw distance. The layout doesn't exist anymore, so I can't go back and retake the picture so that the switch stand is in focus.