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Trains generally track fine over the Pecos, even the matchbook turnouts, until they start to discombobulate,
This long digression on trackage goes back to the statement that I made at the beginning of this post: Your equipment is only as good as the track on which it is operating.
The one more improvement would be to get rid of the traction tire. I do hope that Piko eventually will make available a non tired wheelset. Another thing that I noticed about these things is that the truck pivots are off-center.
These couplers look like a funny knockoff of MTs. There appears to be some copper wire or spring around the piece that holds the trip pin. If you push up on the trip pins, they do come loose but they do not, for whatever reason, fall out of the couplers. I do not know if the couplers will discombobulate if you pull the trip pin. The B-mann knuckle couplers do discombobulate if you pull out the trip pin.
What are Peco "matchbook turnouts"? I never heard that term.
That is the ultimate gospel which should be followed! While good portion of N scale equipment is quite forgiving of track sins, te entire layout will run much more reliable when the track is well laid, and solidly supplied with power.
Most (I would say "all") models from European manufacturers (Pick, Fleischmann, Minitirx, etc. either have an exploded diagram sheet included in the package, or the diagram is available online. That has part numbers of all the parts available for that model.
Any chance that you or someone on this thread can take well-focused close-up photos of the top, bottom, and the sides of the coupler? I'm not planning on getting one of those models, but I'm curious about those couplers.
The package in which they come looks like a large matchbook, hence my calling them "matchbook" turnouts. They are a sharp radius (nine or nine and three quarters) curve. What is funny is that many six axles will go through them. The Peco turnouts track fine. Their problem is that they are electrically unreliable. You can not maintain contact on them. They are power-routing, so no contact, no power.
The instruction sheet in the box does not have those parts. there are a few exploded diagrammes but they are not that detailed. They do tell you how o get the shells and cabs off, which was important for my re-lettering them for my no-historic railroad.
Here are some photographs that I took with my El Cheap-0 telephone. I can not get it to focus well. If you look carefully t the first two, you will see the copper wire/spring that I mentioned. The couplers look more like MTs than B-manns but the spring is similar to B-mann's, though.
Thanks, but not sure how you uploaded those photos, but they only show up as very tiny thumbnails (can't see anything details in them).