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I do believe that the biggest negative to Ttrak is the assumption you HAVE to use Unitrak, or somehow the Kato police will show up. I won't say it doesn't have it's place, and if you have a turnout right on the edge you pretty much HAVE to use a Kato (I've done that twice) but other than that, you won't find any Kato track on my Ttrak modules at all, edges only.
So I'm all in favor of anything like this if it 'forehead slaps' people into doing fine modelling within the dimensional limits of Ttrak. I'm still not sure you could get away with Atlas C55 given all the wheel issues, but I can tell you Peco C55 works just fine.
Actually, the FreemoN guys should adopt something like this to align the ends better ..
Not sure if the Kato police will show up, but I would bet a dollar in vegas that someone will comment about "it's not in the standards" at some point ..
I'm not sure I want to put this in the engineering reports, but I wanted to share something I've put together ahead of the Altoona N Scale Weekend: a module to show off my hacked unitrack, along with a few other nifty things:https://conrail1285.com/ttrak-technology-demonstrator/Take a look if you're curious, and keep an eye out for it in the combined TTRAK layout on Saturday.
Why not have a comparison between a section of Unitrack (as a control/reference) and the Micro Engineering and PECO products?Also, paint/weather and ballast all three sections of track in the same way, so it's a level playing field.
Or do people run pizza cutters still at shows?
Perhaps difficult to believe, but some people do.It can depend upon how inclusive or exclusive your T-Trak group wants to be.Some will suggest that "pizza cutters" can provide more reliable operation.