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RP-25 Wheels
RP-25 Wheels
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Anonymous
Member since
April 2003
305,205 posts
RP-25 Wheels
Posted by
Anonymous
on Tuesday, April 5, 2005 8:04 PM
"OK" so I've been asleep under a haystack, whats the skinny on RP-25 wheels?
I mean the whole skinny cuz I don't know a thing about them. Thanks to all who
respond.
Reply
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willy6
Member since
January 2003
From: Ridgeville,South Carolina
1,294 posts
Posted by
willy6
on Tuesday, April 5, 2005 8:55 PM
I have used KADEE,PK2 and IM, in my opinion Kadee were the best for me. However, you will hear other comments from the IM and PK2 people.[swg]
Being old is when you didn't loose it, it's that you just can't remember where you put it.
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IRONROOSTER
Member since
June 2003
From: Culpeper, Va
8,204 posts
Posted by
IRONROOSTER
on Tuesday, April 5, 2005 9:25 PM
This site http://www.nmra.org/standards/rp25.html has the specs. The idea is that this represents an optimum balance between appearance and operation. Those who are into scaling the protoype down directly prefer a closer to scale wheel but this works well for most people.
Enjoy
Paul
If you're having fun, you're doing it the right way.
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BR60103
Member since
January 2001
From: Guelph, Ont.
1,476 posts
Posted by
BR60103
on Tuesday, April 5, 2005 10:00 PM
RP-25 (Recommended Practice #25) came out a long time ago - the 60s? - and was an improvement over the NMRA standard wheel profile. The main features were the reduction of flange depth from .035" to .025" (in HO) and a rounded flange. The basis was that a round flange would slide off rail joints, particularly misaligned ones, while thin, sharp, "pizza cutter" flanges would catch on them and ride up over the rail.
It was never made a standard, and a lot of companies still make wheels that are worse than standard.
--David
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dknelson
Member since
March 2002
From: Milwaukee WI (Fox Point)
11,439 posts
Posted by
dknelson
on Wednesday, April 6, 2005 8:32 AM
There was another key to the RP25 and that was that the wheel tread is not parallel to the rail from edge to flange and that there is a curve leading into the flange. Before that some wheels where perfectly flat, like a dowel with a flange, and the flange was rounded rather than knife edged. The theory is that the wheel is less likely to pick points, will go around curves better.
I am not explaining this very well. There was an MR article from the early 1960s that did a great job of explaining all of this
While not all wheels today are RP25 there are few if any that follow the design that was common back in the early 1950s.
Dave Nelson
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