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great shots. If you look up on the switchback picture, look just above the switch on the hillside rail. What looks to be a derail is actually a slip rail point. They deliberately designed in a feature so that as the rail 'slipped' downhill, once it got to a full rail length, they'd pull an entire 33' rail and take it back up to the top again. I've never seen that anyplace else, but it testifies as to what a 9% grade looks like.I love Cass because it's real, even though they've upgraded the track with heavier rail and ballast. But same impossible curves and grades as the original logging railroad alignment up the mountain.
I think this is solvable, but I'd still worry more about the bottom one on the crank. That's unlike anything else out there. Maybe just do like Lima and drown it in grease every day whether it needs it or not.
I believe you can cut a gear like that using a lathe and a thread tap with the same pitch. The gear teeth would end up dished and mesh better with the worm.There are many different videos showing how. This is just two: /> />
The teeth look angled in one photo and straight in the next?I've ordered from the same link Max gave. I didn't have it all figured out so ordered a few teeth each way to make sure one would work.
Yes, the teeth are angled. I'll have to try and get some measurements.
Oh....And shouldn't the hole be larger and match whatever tube I'm going to use? If I understand all this correctly.The frame plate is drilled for a M1.4 screw.So according to what you're proposing, The inside dia of the tube should be > 1.4mmBut the dia of the hole in the gear is the dia of the tube + .1mmSo the hole needs to be made actually larger than 1.4mm.