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Bullfrog snot.http://www.bullfrogsnot.com/
I would resist using Bullfrog snot. N scale diesels have notoriously poor electrical pickup as they are.Just my opinion, ymmv
Soooo...why is it again that "N scale diesels have notoriously poor electrical pickup..." ??? Why are they inherently different than HO diesels, or S scale diesels, or O scale diesels, or Z-scale diesels????Just askin'.... Cheerio!Bob Gilmore
That "notoriously poor" statement IMO was a bit strong, but the fact is that N scale weights much less than equivalent H0 scale loco, so the wheels will have less weight on them to assure good contact with the track, and the smaller size model is less forgiving of uneven track. Come on Bob, not everybody's trackwork is as perfect as yours. The "snot" stuff applied to the wheel tread not only prevents that wheel from picking up power, it also (due to sligthlu increased tread diameter) likely changes the geometry of the truck which can also degrade its electrical pickup ability.
@peteski A "bit" strong?? I've run on both HO and N-scale layouts/modules and frankly, the N-scale stuff runs better...I mean waaay better. And not on just my layout/modules. [...]This is not my "opinion" ...it's my experience.Cheerio!Bob Gilmore
@peteski A "bit" strong?? I've run on both HO and N-scale layouts/modules and frankly, the N-scale stuff runs better...I mean waaay better. And not on just my layout/modules. N-scale is regularly run on Ntrak modules which have "joiner tracks" at either end, and regularly have "notoriously" bad trackwork there...too large of gaps, ski jumps, all sorts of misalignments...and the N-scale trains just keep chugging along with their 60 to 100 car trains after the initial setup. Maybe the N-gauge trains back in the 1960's and 1970's, y'know...the TOY trains were bad, with an occasional bad design coming out afterward, but those days are long gone. Modern N-scale (scale) motive power runs excellently in the vast majority of cases, and if the trackwork is too sh!tty for them to run on, it certainly is NOT the engine's fault.So, what does weight have to do with it anyway? The contact patch on larger scale wheels is not much bigger than the contact patch on N-scale wheels...what is weight supposed to do? Squash non-conductive gunk out of the way?? Some of my very best running engines are my smallest ones...the lightest ones...particularly my Life-Like switchers, my Atlas GP-9's and 7's and my Key Consolidations...smooth, slow and reliable. Worst running engines I ever had was a brass Overland Alco PA-PB-PA set...plenty heavy, C-trucks, wipers everywhere, smooth polished NS wheelsets...ran like crap and I never could get them to run reliably. Have a good friend who had some in Rio Grande and he literally smoked his during a show.I used to be on the crew of Lee Nicholas' UCW, a really innovative HO scale layout, and train stoppage was a regular occurrence...which almost never happened on our N-scale Utah N-Railers sectional layout, which was a much larger layout than Lee's, with gaps in the rails at the end of every 6' module.So...from my experience running N-scale trains and HO scale trains on both permanent and portable modular layouts since the mid 1970's, N-scale runs better than HO.This is not my "opinion" ...it's my experience.Cheerio!Bob Gilmore
@peteski So...from my experience running N-scale trains and HO scale trains on both permanent and portable modular layouts since the mid 1970's, N-scale runs better than HO.This is not my "opinion" ...it's my experience.
You are obviously correct Bob - N scale rocks! How could I have held such a wrong opinion about my favorite scale.
I think I've tried most of the suggestions. Perhaps most important was that I ran the three locos separated but within close reach of each other when the locos were "cold" and again when they had been run for some time. There was no noticeable difference--and they all run at close to the same speed. I'm reluctantly concluding that I need to shorten the consist--that these locos just don't have the pulling power of some of my other locos. Although I'm putting the topic to rest, I still can't figure out why they pull well when they are cold and pulling power diminishes as they heat up.Thank you to all for your responses and suggestions.carmelmodelrr