0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Curious, they're all Electrofrog except for the Left, which is Unifrog (already gapped)...
Only the medium radius left and right turnouts are available in the Unifrog format, thus far.
The Victor depot wold look pretty good on that upper level. Just sayin'. Jason
One other reason I prefer Peco, apologies if this has been covered and I missed it, is the width of the railhead. My only Atlas code 55 track is this diamond. When I dropped it in place, I was a little surprised by how much wider it was compared to Peco. Tom L.Wellington CO
...Whereas the Atlas rail height is actually 0.055. I don't work for Atlas, but my guess is they went with a slightly larger railhead for added strength.
The same as the flanges on a girder. The strength of the average beam or girder, such as a bridge, is proportional to the width times the square of the depth. A wider flange strengthens the girder mostly be helping it resist sideways bending forces, so the flange stays upright, instead of twisting and collapsing.Not really needed on model rails, but that's one of the reasons for the wide base on prototype rails.The wider railhead on Atlas could also be code 55 was originally intended, and and the origonal specifications designed, for HOn3. Prototype railheads are about the same width, regardless of rail height, so HO rail, even if it's the right height, is too wide for N scale.Peco, on the other hand, designed their rail for N scale, so could make it narrower.
The Railwire is not your personal army.
I don't work for Atlas, but my guess is they went with a slightly larger railhead for added strength.
Maybe they wanted more space for dirt to accumulate.
Do you have to clean your ballast often, if you use the Arnold Track with the Self-Cleaning Profile? DFF