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Jim Fitzgeralds "Cotton Brutte" pulled quite a few cars by itself!
ONeTrak is for the serious operators but I don't see or hear of many of those layouts showing up at the local train or toy shows.
BANTRAK has a 1T setup .. and they set up regularly .. it's at the B&O museum right now IIRC .. but, no one seriously operates on any NTRAK layouts .. its all roundy round all the time .. ops requires too much setup work to get it going, and that's not something that works for these shows ..
Yep, it's there. Took us three hours to come up with a configuration to clear Santa's workshop, get ADA aisles, keep fire inspectors happy. Need more curved modules, guys.Martin
...with its weight made from depleted uranium. right? Bob, all those things about N-Trak you didn't like seem to be the things that attract and grab attention of all the possible future model railroaders (of all ages). You forgot to mention Thomas the Tank Engine going around about 200 smiles/hr while taking Anne and Claribel along for the ride. I agree that N-Trak is not for serious operators, bit it definitely has its place in the N-Scale hierarchy. ONeTrak is for the serious operators but I don't see or hear of many of those layouts showing up at the local train or toy shows.
The rule of thumb that I have always gone by is for every percent of grade you increase, you cut your train length in roughly half. A loco that can pull 80 cars on level, will handle 40 on a 1% grade, 20 on a 2% grade, 10 on a 3% grade, etc. It not really that simple of an equation but it is usefull when planning. Some say it's more like you loose a 1/3 of your train. It's always nice when the loco can pull more than you planned for. The only way to know for sure is testing.
After 6% it probably breaks down, and I'm not sure what happens with shorter trains. It was pretty dead on on my two layouts that could run 100+ car trains. BTW, curve fitting in math has always fascinated me.