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Most likely somebody doesn't like our "tone"...whatever that is...
I upvoted your comments as I enjoy intelligent, well-informed comments as well as spirited and logical defense of opinions which I may or may not agree with...one of the things I really appreciate about TRW.
As to the well-distributed opinion that Peco, Atlas, Shinohara, and other manufacturers of N-gauge track took British Railway's track standards as the example to model their track after...I did a bit of research a few years ago, and determined they don't comply with any prototype track standard. I've lost the information in the years since then, but it wasn't difficult to find at the time. Nope, Peco C55 track doesn't look much like prototype British Railway trackage...of any era.My conclusion was (and is) that whomever designed the first N-gauge track designed it to look generally like railroad track, but to be sturdy enough to allow trains to run while the track was set up on green or orange shag carpet. It's toy track...while N-scale Railcraft/Micro Engineering track is model track...and Atlas C55 is almost model track.Not that there's anything intrinsically "wrong" with toy track, since a pretty strong argument can be made that ALL model railroading is just people playing with toy trains...in one way or another...
They run fine on the Peco code 55 concrete ties! This layout Im putting back together has Atlas code 55 all over it, so I wont be changing the track! I was thinking the same thing NWSL! I also like the way the Atlas code 55 track looks! We conquered the powerpack here, so I know this will be conquered as well!
I've long thought that N scale should be considered two "scales", like O - "tinplate" and "scale". And, just like O, N started with the "tinplate" trains, and the "scale" models evolved from them. The main difference, besides the size, is that N started with the right gauge, thinks largely to Arnold.
Bob: I agree with the "toy track". I've long thought that N scale should be considered two "scales", like O - "tinplate" and "scale"...
One thing about working with a Dremel is that at low-medium speed, you don't have a heck of a lot of torque there, unlike a normal lathe. So you're somewhat reminded by a drop in RPM that you're working the tool too hard. That's what I meant about the sharp file - the sharper the file the better it cuts without putting a distortion load on the axle or creating heat to damage any plastic component.When I blinded the flanges on my 4-8-4 it literally took hours as the rods and crankpins were going to take a terminal beating if I didn't take it really, really, easy with the file. If you're seeing metal come off and the motor RPMS are relatively constant, you're doing it right and the file is sharp enough to do the job.Some of the coolest little mechanisms out there from the oddball Japanese manufacturers still have absurdly deep flanges. I've had to turn Tomytec wheels (which are split-axle) for customers running on Atlas C55, and at this point I consider it pretty easy to do.