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It's not thread drift I'm having a problem with. Some of my very best posts have been due to the subjects that appear when the thread's direction drifts from the OP's original intent.What I am having a problem with is the subject of Peco 55 N-scale track, and the fantasy that they should follow their HO scale American Prototype product's conception and implementation both of which are favorite subjects of mine.I have written about it so many times here and on other forums that I hisitate to do it again because the evidence is mounting that it's the personification of "beating a dead horse".I notice @peteski Peter has not joined in either. Perhaps he is feeling somewhat the same as me.Oh well...here goes!. . .Fact #2: Peco CHOSE to design it to look toylike, not because it is necessary, but for some unknown reason. Peco already had the drawings and diagrams to manufacture 1:160th scale track based on real A.R.E.A. drawings because of their HO scale C83 trackage products based on the same drawings. Doing the same in N-scale would have been a logical next step.Fact #3: Make no mistake, Peco C55 N-scale track representing track with wooden ties, does not look like ANY prototype track anywhere. It is NOT made to look like British Bullhead trackage, nor British FlatBottom trackage, nor any other country's trackage. It most closely looks like what was first available in N-gauge toy train sets back in the middle 1950's. You don't manufacture injection molding tooling by guessing at the dimensions of what you're doing. Peco did it on purpose and they made a very big mistake.Fact #4: Peco's two turnout types ( Insulfrog & Electrofrog) were ancient and obsolete designs (electrically) when introduced. Their new Unifrog design complies with common sense turnout electrical design that has been around for decades...FINALLY! We're only 19.75 years into the 21st Century. TOOK YA LONG ENOUGH!! Only problems are the plastic guardrails, the weird-looking closure point rails, the funky looking (still) throwbar and the equally funky looking tie spacing/dimensions.. . .
Fact #1: Peco C55 N scale track, with the buried second rail foot is a superb design, which...if evaluated the way it should have been, should have allowed Peco to make the very best, the most prototypical looking N-scale track ever made.Fact #2: Peco CHOSE to design it to look toylike, not because it is necessary, but for some unknown reason. Peco already had the drawings and diagrams to manufacture 1:160th scale track based on real A.R.E.A. drawings because of their HO scale C83 trackage products based on the same drawings. Doing the same in N-scale would have been a logical next step.Fact #3: Make no mistake, Peco C55 N-scale track representing track with wooden ties, does not look like ANY prototype track anywhere. It is NOT made to look like British Bullhead trackage, nor British FlatBottom trackage, nor any other country's trackage. It most closely looks like what was first available in N-gauge toy train sets back in the middle 1950's. You don't manufacture injection molding tooling by guessing at the dimensions of what you're doing. Peco did it on purpose and they made a very big mistake.Fact #4: Peco's two turnout types ( Insulfrog & Electrofrog) were ancient and obsolete designs (electrically) when introduced. Their new Unifrog design complies with common sense turnout electrical design that has been around for decades...FINALLY! We're only 19.75 years into the 21st Century. TOOK YA LONG ENOUGH!! Only problems are the plastic guardrails, the weird-looking closure point rails, the funky looking (still) throwbar and the equally funky looking tie spacing/dimensions.
All I did was ask if I could find Peco Electrofrog switches somewhere .....
So this thread begs the question, which might best be the start of a new thread, Why hasn't a N scale manufacturer of American prototype track come along and taken advantage of this huge market opportunity to construct, market, and sell prototypically correct N scale track for N scale?Railcraft/Micro Engineering tried. Good flextrack, hard to find turnouts.Atlas has made an effort with their code 55 line to criticism and complaints, some even valid, mostly about their turnout construction.Kato and Bachmann, don't get me started about their sectional track offerings and prototype.
My guess is that:1. It is very expensive to make the complex molds to manufacture track, and also draw new rail.
The point made up thread though is valid in that apparently they had to make new molds for the ties in order to get these wire traces in place, couldn't they utilize the same rail embedded in the plastic as done currently but do so with North American tie spacing and Sizing?
Why no, because then the new turnouts (using US tie spacing) would look out of place when used with their existing flex track, crossings, and other turnouts. No modeler would like that. Plus, I believe their main market is still UK.
Hi Guys, as I'm over the pond I can answer Fact #2.The track was designed to look like British track, and it does. Initially, before the Common Market and World Trade, that was their market: Britain. The track was so reliable that everybody wanted it, and the reputation grew. They produce SO much, that there isn't capacity to make an American or Australian, or Russian etc version. Yes, I would like American spaced ties, but, that's life.Cheers, Bob.