Bob Nelson
chuck wrote: Ross is the top of the line, period. Curtis High Rail is made to similar standards but may not have as large a selection.
Ross is the top of the line, period. Curtis High Rail is made to similar standards but may not have as large a selection.
Chuck,
Is Curtis High Rail products back up and running? If so great. The last time I placed an order my check was returned with an attachment saying that do to health issues the order could not be produced. Mr. Curtis had been very helpful in getting me going on the right path with his switches...... he was dealing with an old HO'r! Ross is very similar and is good quality no doubt.
Jim
About the only way to get Atlas to behave on a floor layout is to use cable ties to cinch track sections together and possibly use conductive grease in the rail joiners. Neither of these are conducive to temporary layouts. Neither of these issues apply to permanent installation. The track screws hold the track on place and the dimpled connectors will maintain contact for electrical flow.
Pins do "help" with alignment of Ross/Gargraves but the tubular track has a slight noise issue, though nothing like FasTrack. The hollow rails tend to "sing" a little at higher frequencies. I suspect that Ross sectional is less noisy than Gragraves flex in that there is no webing to resonate. When GG is ballasted, noise is less of an issue anyway. The quietest "layout" I've ever experienced was Atlas O floating on a short berber style carpet. Only noise was whiring of smoke unit and clickety clack of wheels on rail joints. It's too bad that carpeting doesn't look like any scenic material I've ever seen.
I have an extremely low oppinion of ScaleTrax. Given the "flimseness" of the sectional track, I have a hard time imagining the switches being better than Atlas. Of all of the swithces I have or have used, Ross is the top of the line, period. Curtis High Rail is made to similar standards but may not have as large a selection. You drop one order of magnitude down to Atlas/FastTrack, then its another order of magnitude drop to the original O-22 and then it's pretty much everybody else below this.
Thanks, Chuck.
From having fiddled with the Atlas O test track I bought, I can well see that it's not suited for temporary floor layouts. Maybe it's just my hand at connections, or laying out the test track on the carpeting, but I had a numerous problems getting good connections to run electricity throughout the track for power -- thus my concerns over Atlas O track.
I think for me the hi-rail choice is probably going to boil down to Ross versus Atlas O. Is there anything to the Ross claim that the pins assure track alignment (by implication better than the Atlas O track fasteners)?
And would you happen to know if there is any noticeable difference in noise between these two brands of track?
Finally, do you have an opinion on the ScaleTrax "claim" that their switches are stronger and more reliable than Atlas O?
I think I recall from earlier posts you said you used FasTrack, and that you'd painted the rails and base. Are you satisfied with the FT, and at peace with the noise?
Bob
Chuck -- thanks very much for your insightful comments. I've tried lots of different washes with the FasTrack, and it looks better, but I think it's the uniformity of the ballast that gives an artificial feel. The electrical properties of the track and switches are outstanding, however.
I've tried painting the outside rails a rust color, and painting the center rail flat black, but it still does not look as realistic as the other "hi-rail" track.
Do you have any thoughts about electrical properties of Atlas O, Gargraves, Ross and ScaleTrax?
The reason I ask is that I bought a 4x8 of Atlas O and tried it out -- had lots of connectivity problems with the little track fasteners, and I was concerned whether they loosened up in time.
Scale trax doesn't play well with anything else pus it has an odd tie spacing and tieplate detail.
Gargraves wood ties look like wood.
Atlas O has decent detail and the tie plates and spikes look reasonable. The flex track is not easy to work with.
Ross track probably looks the best but is not made of solid rail. The ties are slightly oversized.
Ross switches are the best, period. Some folks will use Ross switches with Atlas track.
BTW, you can use a wash on the FastTrak ballast to make it look more realistic and there are some techniques to quiet it down, including using foam no-grip shelf liner under the track.
Also, Atlas will be releasing its own version of FasTrack shortly with a more realistic "T" profile.
I have a 19x16 walk-in layout built on 5/8" plywood under 1/2" Homasote, and 300 ft of Lio FasTrack with TMCC. The layout is my first, and the FasTrack and switches have worked superbly. As amply noted, though, it's noisy and the plastic roadbed doesn't look realistic.
I'm thinking about replacing the FasTrack as part of a major layout upgrade to improve track appearance and noise level, as well as adding DCS to the TMCC, and am looking at Atlas O, MTH ScaleTrax, Gargraves or Ross track & switches.
I've followed and searched the previous discussions on track in the Forum, as well as the recent CTT article comparing track. However, I have several questions not addressed in what I've been able to find:
I'd like to thank any and all in advance for your thoughts. If the questions have already been answered but somehow missed in my searching the Forum, please just point me in the right direction.
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