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Mentioned before, my particular goal is a C40 drop-in for the Atlas #7, with tie size and spacing to match ME C40 (wooden) flex,
Mentioned before, my particular goal is a C40 drop-in for the Atlas #7, with tie size and spacing to match ME C40 (wooden) flex, so I suppose this is counter to the original objective. I don't know quite where we are in the discussion of the turnout design for concrete vs. wood ties, but I'll point out that while concrete-tie turnouts exist, palletized turnouts with wood ties are very common within concrete trackage. But YMMV. My layout needs these for yards and branchlines, so no concrete there.ME C40 ties are 0.064"W x 0.055"H x 0.675"L, on 0.140" spacing (0.076" between ties). Other dimensions within the pallet depend on whenever Andy's (Proto:87) switch parts arrive; my particular plan since I need 200 or so is to minimize fabrication of rail parts like frogs and points.
I'm trying to get my head around this tie dimension decision. Looking at the Atlas code 55 dimensions, they measure at 7.36" x 9.92" x 101.92" full size. If we round them to the nearest half inch that's 7.5" x 10" x 102". Spacing is 19.52" or rounded, 19.5". That's pretty heavy duty track based on other research. Robert's UP list has lengths of 8' or 9' even, no 1/2' increment.Railroad Tie Association says standard tie dimensions are 7" x 9" x 102" (8.5').I think I will start with 7" x 9" x 102" and set at 22" spacing. With the code 40 rail this will be subtly smaller/ lighter than Atlas code 55 and introduce a .021" larger daylight space between ties affording an appropriate look of lighter duty track, visibly and prototypically. Opinions invited. Tie plates to be determined. Again, opinions invited.
Photo (1) - U.P. Heavily Trafficked Mainline Track just west of Hennefer:
Bob, I see all the photos in both of your posts except the one mentioned above. I see that infamous Google gray "do not enter" sign. I am logged into Gmail (Google) in another tab in this browser.
Re-did it. Better?Cheerio!Bob Gilmore
BTW, code 40 rail scales out closest to 100#/ 130# rail. The height of code 40 is slightly over in both cases. Code 55 rail scales out closest to 155# rail, definitely heavy main line size.
It seems there is merit to laying the different sizes with their different visual appearance when striving for a prototype look.