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Bushings and the wire low friction trucks were an improvement over the stock arrangement, but not quite as much as we were hoping. The last attempt will be made inline with how Rapido is doing the comets and LRCs... actual ball bearings. I did source some that should work, but after two full trainsets worth of testing, hobby funds are temporarily being diverted to other projects. Now that I have a photon though, I can print prototypes at home!Having seen the Rapido samples, I am confident that this will be the way to go, a good looking truck that rolls!
For illuminated cars, why not use batteries? No track pickup needed..
For illuminated cars, why not use batteries? No track pickup needed.For DCC it's more complicated, and I don't have a solution there, unless one wants to use head-end power, like the prototype. Two wires could do it, and they could be hidden by the diaphragms.
Having seen the Rapido samples, I am confident that this will be the way to go, a good looking truck that rolls!
I’m a new participant on The Railwire, and have already learned a lot from recent discussions on Rapido’s N scale Canadian and FP9A releases. This got me thinking … “Jeez, if anyone might have come up with a way to improve the horrid rolling characteristics of those Athearn Bombardier N scale coaches, it would be these guys”. So, I did a search and found this topic.Just had to laugh at Mark’s incline test - unfortunately, it is reminiscent of how, earlier this year, Rapido’s The Canadian coaches similarly got stuck at the top of a ramp, while Kato coaches would roll forever.