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I may be in the minority but I would like to run 40 car trains with DPUs pushing the rear quarter to third. I'm pretty sure if there isn't at least an inch or so of slack in the train that's going to cause problems on a curve somewhere. 1" over 40 cars works out to about 0.0125" of slack per coupler (0.025" per car) minimum. Just kinda guessing here, maybe it doesn't have to be that much. But if there isn't enough slack for that to work I'm not personally likely to be a convert to a different coupler, FWIW.
... I would like to run 40 car trains with DPUs pushing the rear quarter to third.
Yes, as evidenced by the fact that model trains have been around for decades and still do not have a generally accepted solution that works for most cases.Just to raise the bar: @turbowhiz do you think your design could work as a scale-sized (or close) coupler in N scale, and/or as a Z scale coupler?Ed
I have no idea what you mean by "wiggle jiggle" and whether it's something I would care about. Curious if you can describe it better or show a video.
IDK specifically about DPUs, but at least one of @turbowhiz 's demo videos shows a long train w/the N-possible couplers making a reverse move, so all the couplers are in compression.I would sometimes try to speed-match the DPUs to run a bit slower than the lead consist, to try to keep the couplers mostly in tension. It may or may not be beneficial to run the DPUs from a different throttle/address. Another trick that some folks use for DPU operation is to 'derate' the pushers by removing one of the drive shafts, to reduce the chances of a derailment.(It goes without saying, that with using things like long-overhang cars, arbitrarily sharp curvatures, improper weighting, and truck-mounted couplers, etc. that all bets are off anyways.)Ed
@ednadolski , my design has ALWAYS been a true to scale design.
Need to up my photography/videography game, but I’m not quite there yet with all of the other crap needed to get this whole venture off the ground. But I have run a battery of tests, and results are honestly crazy impressive. I’ve even surprised myself… So stay tuned for that in the weeks to come.
One of the issues for me is that my club layout has trackwork that does not at all resemble "quality work". So, I am wondering if I can have trains with these couplers that I can take to my club, or if I will need to have 2 separate sets of trains to do finer scale modeling at home.
@Another question might be “can my spring mechanism accommodate overscale heads and magnetic uncoupling?”, to which the answer is absolutely, I built functional prototypes of that too. But I’m of the opinion we need a restart, and that massively overscale couplers really need to go to advance the scale. Anything traditional MTL compatible needs to be too fundamentally compromised to support that compatibly, at least for my own goals. Everyone is going to have their own requirements of what’s important to them: Magnetic uncoupling, compatibility with existing couplers, wanting lots of slack (!?) etc. might be dealbreakers for some or many. There are other designs around, including the forthcoming VRK which if nothing else won’t slink. Seems to be conflicting information about how its sprung in this thread mind you…
Sounds to me like an opportunity/motivation to fix (or even rebuild, where necessary) the problematic areas of the club layout track. Yes, that will have some challenges, but in the end everyone wins with improved trackwork that is up to spec.Ed
But trust me, you will be shocked how well tight couplers work in these circumstances… Quality trackwork is honestly the only firm requirement.
The club layout will never reach the quality level I want to achieve with my own work, and I am not about to spend the rest of my life on a futile effort.
Quite understandable. Tho I wonder whether a group that is unable or uninterested in achieving something as fundamental as basic, reliable trackwork might regard any kind of new coupler as a non-starter. Not much different, I suppose, than relying on pizza-cutter flanges to mask trackwork issues.Ed