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Sorry about my absence...I took a fall while shoveling ice off of my driveway a few days ago and bruised myself up a bit. The consequence is that I haven't been able to sit for any length of time, while being able to stand and walk just fine. However, feeling better.I'll be posting some close-up, completely in-focus shots of Mark's @narrowminded tie strips from the samples he's sent me tomorrow, then building a short length of roadbed to scaled-down prototype dimensions, painted, weathered and ballasted...probably posting that on Thursday or Friday....assuming my butt continues to heal at its present rate!Although C55 rail isn't proportionally close to the heaviest rail used by any prototype I'm modeling, I still like the visual difference in height using both C55 and C40 together offers, delineating rail weight difference between sidings/spurs and mainline trackage.Hopefully Mark, you can pretty easily and quickly produce some tie strip for heavy-traffic mainline track that will accept C55 rails?????? My order would be for 9' ties since I'm doing mainline U.P. trackage under Big Boys/Challengers/Turbines. I've got about 30' of double-tracked mainline and an equal amount of siding/industrial spur trackage planned for my next big U.P. LDE...and although I've got old Rail-Craft C55 and C40 flex in my stash I can use, I'd prefer to use your superior product.I also have a hunch there's good market for your tie-strips for use with C55 rails...maybe more than for C40 rail.OUCH!...time to get outta this chair!Cheerio!Bob Gilmore
Thanks for the update. Sorry to hear you busted your... Yes, I can do code 55 strips and have already done the 55 to 40 transition strips for coming off a code 55 turnout or just transitioning from one to the other. One related question that you may be able to answer, what would the total height from tie base (bottom) to top of code 55 rail be? The total thickness of the turnout?
I also have a hunch there's good market for your tie-strips for use with C55 rails...maybe more than for C40 rail.
You mean something like this? https://www.shop.cvmw.com/N-Scale-Mainline-CVT-3001.htmEd
Mark, I'm thinking prototype practice, which would basically be C55 and C40 ties and tie plates being identical except for the width of the slot the rail goes into...the only differences in tie height or tie plate height should be the difference between mainline heavy traffic and siding medium/light traffic trackage...but I don't see any need to mess with the tie plate details except for possibly spikehead height and total tie plate width. This would mean the total overall width of the tie plate would also be wider by the extra width of the C55 rail foot, the exposed portions on either side of the rail foot being identical in dimension to C40 tie-strips. Also, if the edge of the C55 rail foot is higher than the edge of a C40 rail foot, then the spikeheads should be higher by that difference to be visible.This means that the bottoms of the ties of C40 track would be higher than the bottoms of the ties of the C55 track it's mating up with by about .011", and there would be a short and very shallow grade from C40 to C55 track. If I were laying both C55 mainline and a C40 siding, I'd shim the bottom of the C40 ties with about a 1.5" long thick paper or cardboard shim so that portion of the C40 railhead run even with the tops of the C55 rails (maybe your C55 to C40 transition piece takes care of this...I haven't looked closely at your design yet), using runny CA with Accelerator to fasten that 1.5" of C40 ties coming off the C55 ties to the shim...then let the track form a shallow grade of about 3 to 6 inches...filling the air-gap between the bottoms of the C40 ties to the cork roadbed with gap-filling CA, setting it off quickly with Accelerator. Prototype transitions between sidings, spurs with mainline trackage always have a short grade down to the non-mainline trackage, to make sure cars won't roll onto the mainline. If there was a doubt about that, they install a derail, so the offending car will derail away from the mainline. That said, I don't see a need for both C55 and C40 track to have their railheads exactly the same height after the short grade from C55 to C40 trackage since the prototype doesn't worry about it.That make sense?
Edit: You're thinking turnouts! This is good. Painting the unballasted turnouts, then ballasting, essentially glues the foot of the rails to the wooden/Styrene turnout ties, but I don't worry about it since they're pretty well socked down to the cork roadbed anyway due to my generous use of PCB ties at stress points on my turnouts...meaning under the frog, under the point rail heels, in the middle of the closure rails, on either side of gaps, and on either side of the throwbar/point rail toes.I install my C55 turnouts so the height mates up with Rail-Craft/Micro Engineering C55 flex...so, that would be a total railhead to bottom of tie dimension of .105" for Rail-Craft flex, and from .1065" to 1085" for Micro Engineering, making sure I didn't measure where they've embossed their brand name on the bottom of the ties.
have an ME turnout that you could measure? Again, total height from bottom of ties to top of rail.
That looks fantastic @ednadolski ! It's almost enough to make me want to start over.