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Welp, I apologize if I have mislead people. These ESM wheels make these cars roll better than kato superliners, but if they are not compatible with passenger cars, then I am not sure what else I can do.
Not that they are incompatible with passenger cars -- they just don't deal well with inferior trackwork. ESM wheels (along with other semi-scale low-profile flange and narrower treads) will work well with well-laid trackwork. Judging by how well they sell out, there are many modelers (including on this forum) who use those wheels successfully (on all sorts of rolling stock). You yourself have been telling us is that they work fine on well laid track, but derail on less-than-stellar trackwork. That's to be expected.I'm really puzzled as to why the Rapido wheels are so bad, but I don't have that set.
Just for grins and giggles. I compared a Kato passenger wheelset with a Rapido Canadian-era wheelset. I don't have the Canadian, but I do have one of the Canadian-style Skyline domes decorated for Delaware & Hudson. The Kato axle length is .557", while the Rapido axle length is .537". So a Kato option is out.HOWEVER ... when I first put the beautifully-decorated D&H dome on the track, it was a lead-sled as well. The problem isn't the Rapido wheelsets. The problem is that relief on the bottom of the centersill makes contact with the axle tubing on the outer wheelsets that serves as the insulator between the wheels. The Canadian cars share this flaw. All you need to do is remove the truck and either file down or carve out with an X-Acto enough material for the outer axles to spin freely. (Edit — it appears on one of the trucks I had to remove some material under the inner axle as well.) Once I did that, the dome rolled as freely as a marble on glass. Rapido loves to put uber detail on the bottom of their passenger cars. I don't run my cars upside-down, so I couldn't care any less about underbody detail, as long as the detail visible from the side when the cars are upright is still intact.Modify the centersill underneath the outer axles on your Canadian cars as I did, and your operational problems should cease.
Does anyone make plastic tubing with the same inside diameter as ESM axles? If so, making ones own split-axle wheelsets wouldn't be hard, and, by adjusting the tube length, one could fit any truck width.
It ran well at home, rolling even better than my kato superliners, but on a modular club layout, the flanges of the ESM wheels pick on the tiniest imperfections in the track and de-rail very easily. In places where the train had issues, other cars had no problems. So I will Continue to experiment with the different ESM axle length, as well as with tangent and Intermountain wheels.