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lol, we all want the best bugs for our wiring Ed
Puddy,Either way will work fine. If you have more matching ballast, you can just dig out enough to run from one rail to the other and then conceal most of the wire under the replacement ballast.DFF
Either way will work fine.
Yep. My tutorial photo doesn't show it, but after having to drill down next to the frog, or through it, to delicately solder a replacement feeder a time or two, I said "Heck with that" and started soldering my own direct feed wire to the frog from underneath.It is also cast and plated, and not easy to solder to, just like the point rails. So I drill into the bottom of it with a pin vise untilI hit some nicer metal inside. Then I tin the little hole I just drilled, tin a piece of wire, and then heat and stuff it in.In general, you can't trust any of the bronze strip connector thingies under those turnouts.
It is also cast and plated, and not easy to solder to, just like the point rails. So I drill into the bottom of it with a pin vise untilI hit some nicer metal inside. Then I tin the little hole I just drilled, tin a piece of wire, and then heat and stuff it in.In general, you can't trust any of the bronze strip connector thingies under those turnouts.
And... I just realized I forgot to solder these jumpers to all the switches I just installed. Dammit.
It makes sense to add a better feeder for the frog.But I have doubts about your soldering method. Like you mentioned the cast metal parts of Atlas turnouts are plated (I don't know what metal - might be Nickel), then under the top plating there is a layer of copper plating (which shows up once the top plating wears out). Then the actual part is cast from some unknown metal (looks like some sort of white metal or Zamak). White metal is not easy to solder. If you drill a hole deep enough to go to the metal the part is made of and then solder the wire to it are you sure that it is a good solder joint or maybe you just have a mechanical connection inside the drilled hole (the solder did not wet the part's metal). Or maybe the proper solder joint is made to the thin layer of the copper plating?I have a broken Atlas C55 turnout. I might investigate that metal myself to satisfy my curiosity.