0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
What brand cars and brand/type of couplers? Body or truck mounted?
Microtrains and whatever couplers come on them stock.
Replace the plastic pins with MT screws to prevent swivel. The plastic pins allow the coupler box to swivel for tight radii curves, but it introduces two pivot factors on each coupled joint that can cause hook misalignment.
This is why some makers use a kinematic (ever changing swing geometry) bar to allow for close coupling. Keep an eye on the ends of the car as they traverse through the crossover, noting how close they are even with all of that motion. These kinematic couplers of my design are for the BLI P70 cars.I just wanted to illustrate the action and to imagine the coupler swing.
Yes, the kinematic coupler design (yes rapido couplers) has pretty much been a standard on most European N scale model trains released in the last 10 years or so. Even on very short cars. The benefit is that this type of coupler allows for close coupling while still being capable of traversing sharp curves.The FVM Hiawatha cars are are I believe the only American prototype models factory equipped with kinematic couplers. Kato offers kinematic coupling for their SP Daylight set, but it is an add-on kit.
The BLI P70 are kinematic, they just chose to put REALLY LONG couplers on the kinematic pivot piece. My design uses the feature but pulls the cars much closer.
Yes, I totally forgot about it (and I have one of those cars I bought to play with the nuclear-glow lighting). I was also thinking of modifying the coupler. That car is sitting in the middle of my projects pile. buried by few other projects.
When you write about your "pile of projects" I can only imagine what your desk looks like. The never ending pile of to do's
And I thought mine was BAD! 😬😬😬
...and here I was going to say that it is much cleaner than mine.