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I've been told in the past code 40 is ok provided the track is laid right. (TBH, even pizza cutters run on Hand laid code 40.) But that's also probably going to be a thing that would need to be cleared with other participants if you go to a show.
Sploosh!I thought everything on Freemo-N was code 55.What about using Code 40 fo the highlighted stuff?
D’oh that was an oversight when drawing up the plan. I was able to scrounge up some Code 40 ME flex track, so that will be used for spurs and siding as highlighted in the drawing. I’m looking forward to chewing up those ties and spacing, it sure does tell the story of the time. I’m even looking forward to experimenting with static grass on the right of way in even in the gauge. I like the idea of an additional module with a side track or runaround as a base for a little tourist train. Maybe it could be one where the track stops halfway on it with the rest of the roadbed continues on with weeds and an out of service bridge on the other end of it?
That snug geometry makes me think that could be adapted into a set of TTrak modules without a lot of head scratching.It would be fun to retain the single track bit, too, to force a bit of thinking into the roundy round dispatching ethos. Lee
I mean, that is the point of T-Trak to be fair. Its for people that don't care how the track looks and want to slap a scenic-ed layout on a table in 5 minutes run some trains for a bit, then pop it apart and have it away in another 5. Which is why I like it in a club setting, I can have T-Trak set up and running completely in the span of time it takes to get one N-Trak module prepped and ready. Though I am making permutations, notably a couple some Japanese style "Min-Module" Curves with 15" minimum radius.
Ed whats the scoop on that Track Geometry car?