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I can't understand why some people just ignore the obvious solutions, which have been available to them since the beginning of this hobby. Why oh why can't they just use the voltage supplied through the metal track to charge the batteries while they are actually operating them? Duh! The conductors (metal rails) are already there. They have been there since the first electric model trains started running on track-power. As far as my doubts go, the line-of-sight IR control just is not reliable enough for me to even consider it. Even with all those extra repeaters which have to be installed. I would be much more likely to accept a radio control. But again, there is a really nice pair of electric conductors directly under every locomotive - why not use what is already there.
Make it 4 ... I'm sorry to say .. but the factory QC on the switches, especially the curved ones sucked .. and yes .. most of my 70+ switches have the plating coming off the frog and closure rails
Bob .. I would suspect the atlas turnouts are sized to fit with the individual pieces .. rather than proto
That doesn't inspire much confidence in me that correct rail sizes would soon be forthcoming unless (like I've said before) there's something that's plastic and injectable that has a truly metallic look to it. Got me as to what it might be...
Consider, too, that it would be quite the challenge to make rail with the proper profile using plastic injection. How are you going to get the web smaller than the head with a two-part mold? Or even a multi-part mold, for that matter, without spending a fortune on tooling? Methinks this would be the deal-killer for injection-molded track, unless you don't care about the rail shape, in which case why would you be worried about correct rail height let alone a metallic effect on the rail heads...
While I have not proof or experience in the area, I think that for a model train manufacturer, it would actually be cheaper to have someone manufacture metal rail for them rather than making very expensive steel multi-piece injection molds for the track. Plus molds need maintenance. Call me a luddite, but I just don't see plastic injection molded rails as a viable option in the future. But I guess this thread was discussing how "old-school" DCC was.
Frankly, I don't see what's so expensive about rolling wire. The machining's not that complex...at all. I could probably do the machining on the rollers using my 6" lathe and build an adjustable framework and drive mechanism out of steel bar stock and aluminum that would be sufficient to roll my own. Hmmmmmmm........rolling smaller wire would be even easier...like code 30 rail that had an actual "rail" cross section. I think there'd be a lot of Nn3 and Z scale modelers who might go for that and be willing to pay for it too. Once more...Hmmmmmmmmm.....
This plastic rails thing got me thinking, just how flexible is plastic vs metal?
I approached several wire companies about doing rail, and there was a unanimous consensus to not roll it; the process would not be clean enough. The recommendation was to draw the wire, and for ~30-40 thou rail it would require multiple dies at a few thousand a pop. Most shops were not interested in drawing custom rail, and those that were had outrageous minimum orders. Maybe for an Atlas-sized company it would be practical, but for a smaller shop there was simply no way to make it work financially.
"Plastic" encompasses a whole world of different materials. However, Styrene is more flexibler than metal. I'm not sure what the unit of "flexibleness" is.
I wonder if extruding it would work? That would eliminate the multiple die costs, but I know next to nothing about it.