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Of all the products that have tried to be an accurate, reliable N Scale turnout, I am the most annoyed and frustrated at the Atlas C55. Remember, when that came out, they touted it as a big advancement for N Scale because it was going to pull us away from ugly code 80 track with wide tie spacing. It was going to be a "new era" for N Scale track. So to do all that work, make all new dies, and design an entire line of crossings and turnouts, and then make such flimsy design mistakes like the point rails and throwbar....ugh. They took it 90% of the way there and then dropped the ball at the goal line.
Yes, the Atlas turnouts could certainly use a quality control boost. No doubt about it.However I think they present more of an issue for some than for others. The "out of gauge" issues you've experienced with your steamers simply do not affect my diesels.
That may be so, but to me the point is that any commercially manufactured track (any scale), should be in correct gauge. Just because your locos (most N scale diesels are also manufactured tight in gauge, which is another problem altogether) don't have problem, doesn't give the manufacturer a free pass.
Following that statement up, NEVER assume that your brand-new engines are properly gauged. Cheerio!Bob Gilmore
... Why hasn't a N scale manufacturer of American prototype track come along and taken advantage of this huge market opportunity ....
C55 rail is a bit too tall, and C40 is a bit too wide.
I could use Proto87Stores track tieplates for each and every tie on the C40 trackage (including both track & turnouts), and have proper etched frets of the same things made for my C55 mainline trackage and turnouts. One part of me would love to do this just to see if it's worth the effort...and believe me, it would be a LOT of extra effort (!)...but another part of me has serious doubts that it would be worth it...and then there's the other part of me that wants to do it just because nobody I know of has ever done it (Ed @ednadolski came close) and I'd like to document the effort and results.
Frankly, I'm not sure I see the point of going to such lengths for detailed N-scale track, unless one is also willing to put that same level of attention into the rolling stock, detailing, and scenery that will accompany it. That includes things like scale wire handrails/grabirons/stirrups/details (no cast-on parts!), narrowed wheel treads and reduced flanges, and of course none of the grossly oversized N scale couplers (Micro-Trains TSCs being the exception, provided you make your own pockets ).
It's also that the railhead width is overscale for N, but that to my eye stands out the most because it is shined/polished for electrical contact purposes.....
Interesting that you bring this up. As rail gets smaller and smaller, if we were to properly make it proportionally thinner, we end up with a LOT less physical contact surface with the wheels for electrical pickup. Don't underestimate how huge this is.A reduction in surface area of 25%, for example, is a lot. If you had an 8-wheel pickup system, you are now effectively down to 7 wheels.
The Arnold Rapido trains with which I started out always ran well on their track with its unprototypically shaped rail profile.(http://davidksmith.com/birth-of-n/arnold.htm)