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It should be a round post in an oval hole.
While maybe not a conventional straight whisker, it is not a MTL-type compression coil spring either. To me that spring is more like extended whisker than coil. That is why I called it a "single whisker-type" spring. It's all in the semantics I guess.
Wouldn't that be a (micro) torsion spring? Basically, with a single winding.https://www.leespring.com/micro-springshttps://www.leespring.com/torsion-springshttps://www.amazon.com/small-torsion-spring-Industrial-Scientific/s?k=small+torsion+spring&rh=n%3A16310091Ed
... I suppose someday a clever model designer will come up with an N scale underframe with a shock absorber of some description built in, that will allow for that 6 or 8 scale inch compression, and add another $15 to the cost of a freight car.
Couplers are hard!
I am not an expert on cushioned underframes, but my understanding is that when a train has a large number of cars so equipped, a lot of what we view as "slack" is the expansion and compression of the cushioned underframes as the train accelerates or decelerates. Which cannot be simulated by the coupler (and it strikes me as unreasonable to ask that coupler manufacturers simulate it), although I suppose someday a clever model designer will come up with an N scale underframe with a shock absorber of some description built in, that will allow for that 6 or 8 scale inch compression, and add another $15 to the cost of a freight car.
Would that still work? Seems to me, the round post is needed in a split-shank design, to keep the top/bottom halves aligned and pivoting correctly.
Perhaps there would be enough play between two mated couplers, to give the impression of some slack action.
...Excess free play in the pivot post (or knuckle) will lead to “wiggle jiggle” in some circumstances. I noticed this effect in my development process when I had subtly too much (like ~.004”) free play in my own boxes. It takes the right circumstances to occur, but its noticeable when it does.
In this designer’s opinion slack is very much a bad thing in small scale model trains. The TSC and my own N-Possible scale head couplers DO have slack in the head, but not much. Technically an overscale amount. Things operate (and I mean operate, switching, not just roundy-round) SO much better with low slack couplers. Physics doesn’t scale, so your trains will operate much more prototypically in appearance (No “wiggle jiggle”… technical term. Not to be confused with “Slinky”) and more importantly in a mechanically reliable fashion without intentionally adding slack. Everything is a tradeoff, nothing is ever 100% perfect, but on balance I’m strongly in the “slack is bad” camp.