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It is the play in the couplers. They make a small spring to put on the axle of the last car (caboose) it creates slight drag to fix the slinky effect.
Congratulation on scoring a Lifelike 2-8-8-2. I think it's the best N Scale articulated engine ever made. Ya done really well choosing that one.
They make.. as in micro trains?Thanks for the tip..Sparky
If you search for "slinky" in this forum (and online) you will find lots of discussion about this phenomenon. Like Chris said, it's just a fact of life with Microtrains couplers, and there are various ways to alleviate, but not completely eliminate, the problem. The resistance spring added to the wheelsets in the caboose is one way. Congratulation on scoring a Lifelike 2-8-8-2. I think it's the best N Scale articulated engine ever made. Ya done really well choosing that one.
Correct.See https://www.micro-trains.com/n-2-truck-restraining-springs-1953-12-ea-00112002
I did a test run with a few micro trains box cars as you can see in the video the box cars jerk back an forth. Does anyone know what could be causing things and how to fix?
They make a small spring to put on the axle of the last car (caboose) it creates slight drag to fix the slinky effect.
There's another fix I remember reading about in MR years ago. The trick is to put a dab of grease in the coupler pocket spring area to damp the spring but still let it center the coupler. The writer of the article claimed it worked but I never tried it.Doug
Classic Micro-Trains couplers pogo effect. It's fundamental to the MT coupler desing, you can always find a speed that will cause the couplers to resonate because the springs are part of the axis of motion (by design).Another example:Notice that the effect is cumulative, so it is worse at the cars at the end of the train.The fix? Don't use couplers with springs in them, but alas that is not practical for most folks.Ed