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I'm not rolling my eyes, I think Peteski makes a good point. Bodymounts are the way to go on freight cars and perhaps some head end other cars that are switched in and out of consists, but in many passenger trains that tend to be run and stay in coupled trainsets, the visual benefit of body mounted couplers is lost under the diaphragms and talgoes offer an operational advantage, IMHO. For example, my Kato Super Chief may get an occasional extra baggage or a sleeper or two, but the basic trainset is the same; I couldn't care less about the coupler mounts as long as the operation is flawless (and it is).Just my two cents, Otto K.
You say that switching to 1016's (longer shank) solved 95% of the problem. In these curves, are you sure thecar edges or diaphragms aren't pushing on each other and making the cars rock up in the corners, causing these derailments?It sounds like the longer coupler prevented the cars from doing this (almost).
Well I'm glad to see that we all have contributed to the analysis, without just blindly replacing the wheelsets (which would have most likely not made things better). Too bad that Rapido is not considering the kinematic-type couplers (which have been widely used in European models, even on very short cars). Those allow for close coupling, while still operating reliably on very tight curves).Seems that Rapido is catering to what likely is a minority of N scale modelers who demand prototypical coupler mounting, and obviously they either have layouts with very broad curves, or just display their models statically, in a display cabinet.
I don't think it's a design problem as it is a track design problem..No easement between the curve turnouts is the problem. Mine runs fine with easements between turnouts and curves.....
The new MTL are all body mounted. Do they work all right?