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/>Note esp. the centerbeam and the cars that follow.I don’t have one of the prototype, but I don’t think one that did this would stay in one piece for very long.Ed
Odd, I really don’t get that effect on my layout.
If prototype trains had as much slinky as microtrains couplers have they would be all over the ground... You notice an excess of cushioned drawbars in a train but you dont see cars bouncing like MTs do...And slack running in and out is different.
It is really funny. I have been in N scale 1990 or so and always thought of the slinky effect as just an exaggerated slack effect not, what I would call, an inchworm effect.
I'm honestly not sure why it's so bad for him, but Ed's issues shown in the video strike me as extreme. I usually only see the slinky on the last car on the train or with older cars that haven't been properly weighted. I run on similar grades at similar speeds.
.... and look more prototypical than Rapidos.
Not exactly a high bar there....
One other vid, similar cars on same track at same speed, same loco too. However all cars were converted to LEZ couplers, so not a single pogo to be seen.
No question about the superiority of LEZ couplers, but how many modelers will do the conversion?
. . ., I've managed to convert 6 cars in the last week, with far better results in terms of ease and speed of installation, reproducible results, and borderline stunning detail to boot. [Not sure why I felt compelled to post this here, aside from the fact that I'm still really giddy about it.]