Hey guys,
I came across this problem the other day when I tried running my turbine on the REALLY tight 027 turn I made on the one end of the layout. All of my other locos can do it, just the turbine cant. It always jumps the rails! So I took the curve off, and ive been trying to figure out how I could soften it up a little bit. I fully extended the curve till it can for through fine without jumping them' der' tracks, but now the curve is way off! Anybody got any Ideas???
Kooljock1 wrote:Perhaps the added weight of a boiler casting will hold the train to the tracks. You can probably find one on eBay.
Cold.
Funny, but cold.
This is a hard way to solve it
Remove everything.
Make a new table top section.
Andrew
Watch my videos on-line at https://www.youtube.com/user/AndrewNeilFalconer
Frank53 wrote: Kooljock1 wrote:Perhaps the added weight of a boiler casting will hold the train to the tracks. You can probably find one on eBay.Cold.Funny, but cold.
HAHAHA, very funny! I have the boiler dowstairs, just was doing some maintenance, didn't go through with it on either. I will probably shift some trackage over to comesate for the curve.
Jerry,
Have you thought about creating an easement into the curve with a larger radius track?
Jim
Modeling the Baltimore waterfront in HO scale
jerrylovestrains wrote:Well, the problem was that i sqeezed the curve till it was basically a 022 curve, causing the wheels to bind. I moved the one straghtaway from it, and I got the curve worked out fine, now all my locos cruise through it no problem!
Some N gauge locos dont like curves that tight.
That's the old pepper, Jerry! I knew you'd find the solution.
Our community is FREE to join. To participate you must either login or register for an account.
Get the Classic Toy Trains newsletter delivered to your inbox twice a month