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The silicone worked like a charm!... not even a hint of creepage or wicking of the scenic cement up into the turnout mechanism.
No concern whatsoever about shorts...Most understand that individual ‘powered’ modules are wired BWWB (the tracks - red and yellow- are wired in opposite polarity)To be able to actually use the crossover in a layout, the polarity of the yellow track (rear) is reversed at the power source. When the situation requires the two lines be completely separate (like when the red line is operated on DCC and the yellow line is DC, or the BWWB wiring must be preserved, like when they become the same line while using balloon loops, you simply put custom spacers into the manual throw slots to prevent inadvertent throwing of the switch.These crossovers are isolated/gapped already, so they don’t produce a shirt until something actually traverses the divergent route when operated in opposite polarity.
Aren't you always going to have a direct short with the rails being wired reversed from each other on the two lines? Any engine crossing the gap will short the layout won't it? If they cannot be used in the majority of layout configurations, why put them on a module? I have to admit I have never understood the logic of the TTRAK wiring specifications. Did they originally plan that both tracks would be part of a dumbell type arrangement where they are part of the same loop? That is rarely how most clubs seem to set up their TTRAK layouts.