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The sound and the slight jerkiness are completely outweighed, in my mind, by the consistent and reliable operation you've been able to achieve. I think Jesse put it best, it's a great modeling scale but T gauge doesn't run well enough. ... The linear motor concept changes the game entirely.
@martink I am totally fascinated, but have some questions.Is the magnet spacing and quantity per car required?Could only one magnet at each typical truck (bogie) center still work?What size are the magnets?
Can the cars and tender be coupled together, and if not sure, what happens if you do?
Printed side frames and wheels could just go along for the ride and would hide the magnets.
Have you thought about clear matte adhesive backed mylar for the track surface? These can be printed on with a laser jet printer.
@martink that all makes much sense. Thank you so much for the info!I would also think that the coplanarity of the magnets in the car helps with smoothness, so I assume you line up the mags on a metal plate before you adhere the carbody to them.
can the "track" be purchased in individual sections or is it one long PCB strip?
One more, I assume this would not work on anything but near-flat track elevations, right?
Byt eh way, that last shot looks like a nice PRR K4, (lol, I know many Australian steam had Belpaire boilers) ...
Another thought about track... and what I'll be trying for my layout:Print the track image in color on self-adhesive paper, then laminate it with Avery 18665 clear label material, which has a flat finish and is very thin.This way the image is protected from wear by plastic that isn't shiny.
Aha.. But all grades com to an end whether going up or coming down, correct?Exaggerated: __/How do the magnets and cars handle the grade transitions in the vertical plane, or I assume that must be a very gradual curve?