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Hey! All the photos worked now!One tip... you might resize them so that they are only 12" wide at 72 dpi (864 pixels wide).They will scale more manageably in the browser window. Right now they are pretty huge.As for the project, now I see. So the idea depends on the pilot truck being held in place by a shoulder screw,so that the shoulder bottoms out and keeps the little "wing" thing firmly in place while the truck can still pivot.I suppose if the part is made from phosphor bronze, it will keep its shape. I'm will say I'm a little worried that with a strip that is thin enough to apply the right sort of light pressure (you used .003", right?), it will deform over time, graduallybending away from the truck arm so that it doesn't apply enough pressure anymore.
I'm still trying to understand why it works.When the engine enters a curve, the problem is that the drivers try to climb up and out of the outside rail.With that retainer in there, when the pilot truck wants to move over to go around the curve, the retainer somewhat prevents it, trying to keep it straight. Since it cannot go straight (unless it also derails), the only other alternative is for the frame to move more into the curve to stay in straight alignment with the pilot truck. When it does that, it pulls the drivers into the curve also, so they go around instead of derailing.That's all well and good, except that there is almost no downward pressure on that pilot truck is there? I mean, not compared to the big frame weight resting on the drivers. It can only work, I suppose, if there is enough of a spring above it to get some serious frame weight on that truck.Loren, is that how it works?