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Nice write up Ed. Thank you. I have forwarded your page to our favorite librarian who is interested in trying to get the kids involved.-Buddy
I should build one of these ..
Thanks for posting this. Is that "Long sides are 14.25" on the first graphic a typo?
Certainly not a criticism, but I have never liked exposed T nuts as they eventually will work themselves loose. What I prefer is to counterbore the block from the styrofoam side and trap a rod-coupling nut inside the hole. Drill a hole just undersize of the dimension across points and tap the nut into the hole. The nut will follow the counterbore and center on it. This will leave pockets all along the flats of the nut. Drizzle some epoxy or even yellow glue in these pockets and the nut will NEVER rotate in the hole. One advantage of this is the carriage bolt will have the same amount of adjustment, but will allow a longer thread engagement inside the nut with less wobble on the bolt and the nut will never loosen or come out at all.@Ed Kapuscinski , sorry for my ignorance, is there a formula to calculate side lengths that will work with other modules? 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, etc.?
But you can just do so much with T-trak that you can't easily do with N-trak, and it starts with that 3-track main line and curve geometry limits.
Working with T-trak modules has let me play with modeling the PRR scenes from the 1920's instead of tearing down my entire layout and starting over, and I don't have the space for two layouts anyway. I'm more interested in the local history and prototype scenes than just the PRR equipment per-se, the PRR just is 'there'. But you can just do so much with T-trak that you can't easily do with N-trak, and it starts with that 3-track main line and curve geometry limits. And I'm the renegade now doing 1-track modules by throwing the second inner main behind a narrower version with the skyboard moved closer in but still fitting the 14" total. I've also done an Nn3 oval on a standard triple, using Rokuhan track components.And I've got HO friends converted over as well, same deal, they aren't willing to scrap a complete layout but building a couple T-trak modules is a great way to dabble in N without a huge investment or commitment of time and money.