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These connectors are not proprietary to Kato, but they are most commonly used in radio controlled hobby applications. The connectors Kato uses are called Mini Tamiya/Kyosho connectors. The tamiya connector is the female housing with male pins. The kyosho is the male connector with female pins and the clip tab that holds it to the tamiya connector. Kato uses these connectors with 22 gauge blue/white pair for track power, red/black pair for turnout switching.These connectors can be obtained from Maxx Products. A kit with housings and pins for one tamiya and one koyosho connector sells for $1.50 at the time of this writing.It is part no. 2913. Individual tamiya and koysho connector housings and pins sell for $1.00 each. The tamiya is part no. 2917 and the koyosho is part no. 2914. These require a standard molex type crimp tool capable of crimping .062" diameter pins, such as the GC/Waldorm W-HT-1921.
Make sure Arduino's are on your list. I would think the largest being an Uno, a Mega is probably overkill for a single TTRAK module.Are you thinking of a full blown rack system or some sort of inter-connectable module that would fit under a TTRAK module? AFAIK there isn't much under most, it's not like people store legs under them like they do NTRAK modules. I would even consider small project boxes with magnets to hold them to each other like a certain manufacturer has their inter-modal containers held together.