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That's interesting Pete. I did not know that. So the only way to know if the tracks are "clean" is to run some trains and see if they stutter or the lights flicker?
The Masonite pad cleaning car idea goes way back to the early electric model trains, but from my perspective it doesn't seem like a really good idea....Question for people using Masonite cleaning pads: how often do you either clean or change the pad.
Masonite doesn't seem to be very absorbent. So how much grime can it absorb as it rubs against the track. It seems to me that in no time the grime will just sit on the surface and will get redistributed over the track. Question for people using Masonite cleaning pads: how often do you either clean or change the pad?
This thread is the reason I can't wait for battery technology to get so good that we can stop using track power altogether.Track cleaning, to me, is the single biggest impediment to me enjoying my trains. We've got the motor problem solved.I have never had much interest in putting decoders in my engines, even though I think DCC is a terrific technology.But if they get to the point of having a wireless DCC decoder + battery that can fit in tiny spaces, I'd be on it like a dog on a bone.And Ed, I apologize in advance for the obvious thread drift!
How much current does a N scale loco typically draw? Current lipo battery technology can probably pack about 1000 mAh in the size of a boxcar.
In this thread from 2010 [ https://www.therailwire.net/forum/index.php?topic=21852.0 ], there was no response to the question inquiring if anyone had tried the Micro-Trains track cleaning car with the motorized cleaning head. Since then, has anyone given it the proverbial whirl and, if so, how did it do?