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Bryan's wheel flange thickness does not look that much different that this @peteski -vaunted ( ) Kato wheelset:
Translation: Somebody feels slighted for not being included in the beta test group.
I know this is facetious and in good humor. But to clarify, the wheel samples were sent to modelers that we knew owned continuous-run layouts so that the wheels could be put through the paces — through various turnouts and crossings, etcetera.
IIRC, peteski is a member an NTrak group. In my several decades long experience with NTrak, if you want a product torture tested on a wide variety of trackwork, then an NTrak (continuous run) layout fits the bill.Of course, that wouldn't include operation on (non-PECO) code 55 or code 40 track, but presumably other modelers could furnish that data. As an added bonus, you would have had the benefit of peteski's wide-ranging "curiosity" sooner, rather than later.
... but definitely 33” 100-packs, and probably 36” and 38” MTL-axle-length wheels....
Bryan... I think I have an answer why the trucks look wonky with the bearing caps askew. The caps are triangular and require a drafting angle larger than the circular bearing surface. So when the triangles are not aligned, the drafting angle difference becomes apparent.
Daniel, I don't think that is the case. The truck sideframe faces are done in side-facing molds, so the draft angle on the triangular end caps will be symmetrical, regardless of the rotation of the triangle. The molds is separated into 4 parts: top/bottom/left/right parts.
... If you don't point out shortcomings on a model, you have no chances of improving it...
Is one side insulated, or both? One thing I'd like to do is cut axles in two and make wheelsets suitable for electrical pickup.
... Bonus points if you can offer them with 10K resistors across the gap.
Pete take a look at the end caps... they are built like a triangular pyramid. The trucks look right because the narrow part of the base of the end caps is pointing up. But if one was rotated, the flat spot would be on top.
Looking at the base of the prototype end cap base is cylindrical.
... Actually that photo of the 1:1 truck shows that the ESM's wheel rim thickness is pretty close to that particular prototype wheel. I might have to take back my earlier comments.
I got excited by the 38” wheels until I remember that the Kato axle length on the Maxis is wider like the old Atlas size. Still 36” are cool, since BLMA and Tangent wheels are becoming hard to find.