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Hey all, I have some information on this, Peco had a booth at the this weekends NMRA National Show in Dallas which I attended. It was manned by two people, one of them a design engineer. Amongst all their other track offerings, He had on display rapid 3D prototyped track and switches for a planned future line of N scale track built to American standards. [snip] He did relate they planned on using the new uni-frog concept as they have recently released in HO. [snip] Sending a design engineer with the prototype to the NMRA National show looking for opinions tells me, Peco is serious about releasing a quality offering. Given their history of manufacturing complete lines of componants, I believe their future system will warrant serious consideration. Hope this answers some of your questions Jim
Maybe NBD for you but I don't want the hassle especially if it is at the price point they are putting out. Not worth it if the have a code 80 profile. I have other things I can spend that time on when building modules. I'll stick with my Atlas or ME code 55 which take all of 10 seconds to insert into the rail joiner and hit it with a dab of flux and then a soldering iron.
If you are following any kind of module standard PECO code 55 is excluded in most due the specific fact of it issues interfacing with standard code 55.
In Free-MoN, they don't use rail joiners between modules, so it's a non-issue from that standpoint, but the turnout issue (not NMRA standard) precludes the use of Peco.
... I really want to see them do this in N:<C36-7>
Interesting. Curious as to your interest here. It essentially is/was an export model - 90% either sold or resold to non-US entities.
He wants the Conrail . . . .
I really want to see them do this in N:[C36-7]
Has anyone heard how the Aurora Miniatures C36-7 (HO) is coming along? Ya know, because Bachmann...
All I know is there is no chance of seeing Aurora in N, while the B-Mann has a decent chance of ending up here eventually. The first thing I noticed from the drawing is that they seem to be using the same 5-step pilot for all models, which Conrail did not use. It will be interesting to see if the Atlas or Bachmann B23-7 pilots would work.
Bachmann probably tooled these up mainly for the Chinese model train market: ...