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BUT, the other thing that greatly irritated me was that it was painfully obvious that when it did run, it constantly derailed the pilot truck. Didn't do that on my home layout. Remember I'd swapped out the lead truck for smaller flanges, (Peteski!) and that came back to bite me on Kato #4's on Ttrak modules - not my own, because those were fixed, but on everybody elses. So I'm going to have to put a different lead truck on it with deep flanges to run Ttrak, probably a modified Trix, don't know, but that original modified lead truck picked every set of Kato switches. I can either do that or turn into the Kato switch Nazi and demand compliance.So after a lap or so, I yanked it, greatly disappointed.
One thing I'm surprised is that your loco had problems on T-Trak which uses Kato Unitrak as that stuff is bulletproof. I guess I would have to see exactly where the low-flange pilot wheels were derailing on the Unitrak switch to figure out what the problem was. I seem to recall that there was some issue with Kato #4's switch points. Not sure as I don't have much exposure to Unitrak.
Sounds like latout made up of T-Trak modules have similar problems that NTRAKkers have been putting up for decades. And here I thought that T-Trak with the reliable Unitrak would be almost trouble free. Again, it looks like the human factor is the main cause of the problem.
Kato Unitrak is Bulletproof. Its just that some are gifted to be RPGs.