0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
These are not passing sidings. It is a four track interchange yard. I do like the 15" rule John. I have one curve that is 10.5". I will negotiate with the plan and make it no smaller than R15"Brian
My opinion:16" absolute min for industrial spurs and/or if you need to compromise looks. Anything less may involve equipment restrictions (although there are prototypes for that).For mainlines, 21" in visible areas or on grades (which I guess you may not have) or 18" in flat hidden areas (may also not apply in your case). But my goals are to run long trains.
Put me in the 15" minimum camp for any siding, and at least 18" radius for the mains, more preferred.For any radius, easements help the aesthetics of trains running through. Turnouts provide those naturally (Atlas 55 has 30" radius through the frog, I think). For other curves, layout the 18" radius to hit the inside rail, not center to center, so the curve gradually goes into it's radius. Putting small shims (business card height, or a bit more) gives them some super elevation and is easy to do, as well.I did a layout once where a 180 deg turnback curve was partially visible and partially hidden in a tunnel, so I widened it where visible and made it a bit tighter where it wasn't. Bad move as the locos and trains slowed down when they hit the tighter turn, even if the rest of the train was visible, so there was an unexplained and visually jarring running characteristic which I never liked.As to tail tracks for switch leads, I recommend a slight uphill gradient, and being as straight as possible. Pushing N Scale cars around a curve to switch usually leads to the first car being pushed up and off the rails if going 90 deg. or over. If curved, a slight superelevation helps keep them on the track a bit better. While a switch lead ought to be as long as your longest AD track, I also find that switching much over 15-16 cars adds to problems, even if you run really slow. Therefore, a lead that allows you to only switch half your cut length is a bit unprotypical, but in the end, probably makes switching more enjoyable.