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Unless your established minimum radius is greater than 18 inches it should still work.
You will see it, but not very often on a high-speed/tonnage main line, and never in a current main line design. I've seen some designs go through some relatively absurd handstands to avoid that situation. If it was 'current day' CSX or NS or UP or BNSF, on a main, they'd never do it. You'd see the switch moved back to the nearest tangent, throw in a diverging turnout to the switch, and run it parallel for a quarter mile if they had to. And it is funny sometimes, because they wouldn't think twice about running (or even backing) a train through a crossover between mains with the same switch geometry.But I can also send you half a dozen shots of switches on curves, and at least a couple where the 'main' takes the diverging route, usually with an appropriate speed restriction in place. A lot more common in the past and on shortline/industrial situations. Usually the issue is that the switch just gets beat to pieces if there's much traffic over it.