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Where is the preferred place to order the ESM ones? All I find is "out of stock"
Ike: That's also where I get mine. Great service, and they're very good about answering emails.I hesitate to name them in most posts because I don't want to sound like an ad agency!
Streamlined Backshop has a list: http://www.sbs4dcc.com/tutorialstipstricks/nscalewheelstrucksandcouplers.html
Okay, time for a little rant.I noticed that Streamlined Backshop's advice about low profile N-scale flanges is perpetuating the falsehood that they're a necessity for Code 55 rail. Here's the quote "Low Profile - a.k.a. "Fine Scale". This type of wheel has become very popular in the mid-00's as N Scale modelers seek more fidelity and adhearance to scale standards. It also became a necessity with the introduction of Code 55 rail. They look great but require near-perfectly laid rail and meticulous grooming of rail joints, ballast and switches."I have been laying Rail Craft and Micro Engineering Code 55 track since the mid-80's and pizza cutters run just fine on it. Code 55 rail was introduced to N-scale decades before "the mid-00's".And, I do not do "meticulous grooming of rail joints, ballast and switches"...I just install 'em properly and run 'em without any problems with a variety of flange sizes. I changed to low-profile wheelsets when the only place you could buy them was NorthWest Short Line, but were so expensive I built a machining fixture and turned my own from the old Kadee N-scale 3 piece wheelsets.Anyway, this is a sore spot with me...not here at TRW since most of us know that Atlas55 is the only Code 55 N-scale track product that has problems with pizza cutters, but on FB...EVERYBODY thinks all "Code 55" N-scale track products won't run pizza cutters, as does the person who wrote about Low-Profile N-scale flanges at Streamlined Backshop evidently.I'm done. Cheerio!Bob Gilmore
is the ME higher i suppose than Atlas, when it comes to code 55? I run Atlas 55 and i have to change wheels or I get the clicking of the wheels hitting the spikes.
I'll point out that many, but not all, pizza-cutter wheels are also narrow in gauge, which causes them to not work on any correctly gauged turnout.One notable exceptions is Kadee/Micro-Trains