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The solution for me was to use thicker wire but add a short extension of thin wire to go through the throwbar.
Ok I'm curious. How exactly did you do that?
I have seen where,for extensions, you can use brass tubing just large enough for your wire to pass through.. the straight sections, u don't need tubing on the bends or the end. no need for solder or jb weld. simply slip it over the straight areas.here is an example />
Do you think the standard Tortoise throw wire will work if I am going up through 3 inches of extruded foam if I remove the springs?
3" is a long way. The wire isn't long enough, and even if you cut a new longer piece of piano wire of the same gauge, it will be tooflexible. I have used the trick nickelplate759 suggested... slipping a piece of brass tubing over the thin wire for most of its length to stiffen it, leaving an inch or so of the wire sticking out the top to go through the drawbar. It's pretty easy to do.
Max, what myself and a couple other local buddies do and have had success is to use .032 steel wire from K&S.Jon
That works for a long reach (it's stiff enough), but that's exactly the wire I had trouble with when trying to fit it to the Micro-Engineering throwbar. I had to drill a larger clearance hole in the drawbar to fit the wire, and that weakened the drawbar to the point of breaking easily. I had to replace a couple of turnouts because of this, which is why I switched to either stiffening smaller wire (Tortoise comes with 0.025") with brass tube or splicing the 0.025 wire on the end of 0.032 wire to reach through the drawbar.By the way, the 0.032 wire works fine with Atlas code 55 turnouts.
I think I might try the method of splicing the 0.025 wire onto the 0.032 wire. I am thinking of maybe a small piece of brass tube at the end of the 0.032 wire, then fill that cylinder with JB Weld and connect the 0.025 wire.Mike