QUOTE: Originally posted by jkerklo Would a prototype railroad ever share rails like in the 4-rail or 5-rail diagram? Seems sharing rails would cause construction/maintenance problems. John Kerklo TCA 94-38455 www.Three-Rail.com
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QUOTE: Originally posted by lionelsoni Actually, the 4-rail version has the same number of rails as a prototype gantlet, while the 6-rail version is the one that reveals the toy-train use of three rails.
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QUOTE: Originally posted by lionelsoni Daniel, let me elaborate on your relay scheme: Since the two tracks would almost certainly be powered from separate sources, each relay should also disconnect the rail that it is switching from the other relay coil before connecting it to the supply. Otherwise, any difference in supply voltages could cause both relays to operate at the same time and create a short circuit. Furthermore, each relay coil should be returned individually to the supply for the track that it is powering, or, better, both should be returned to a fixed voltage.
QUOTE: Originally posted by fjerome ok, i was following this pretty well until big boy made the CTT reference. i grabbed my feb/05 issue up, but can't find anything related to this. am i looking in the wrong place? abnormally dense? dave, the 5 rail is too easy and what is the point. if you can't have some real overlap, then the situation won't be clear. go with the 4 rail.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Jim Duda Gentlemen: Seems it's a given The Professor should incorporate one into his Monster layout...c'mon Elliott, it would certainly be an attention getter - and you could document your control scheme and share it with us. Since it will be computer controlled, have the opposing trains wait for one to clear it, then send the other one over it. Are you game? Post the video on the forum for us...pretty cool stuff!
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