Modeling the "Fargo Area Rapid Transit" in O scale 3 rail.
27" would probably be just about worthless. 42" would be the absolute minimum, and you may not even be able to get 5 cars up without some spinning. Each engine will be different, but I think you want something that most engines can reliably climb. I haven't built any because it takes up a 1/2 of my available space.
Wes
Hi Boyd
There is a vendor, Ashlind designs [?sp? google it] that markets helix kits. principally for HO but they can/will do O. all you need do is put it together. OH and pay for it, the shipping is most of the cost. Another way is to prototype...relatively cheap...Michaels hobby stuff store...flowers and the like...sells circles of foam and mdf-like materials. You can cut and try it with some dowels to see what the slope etc. will be. you can even try a small set of rolling stock. then if it looks like what you want, and it is reasonably stable, power it up for a test drive. THEN build a production model substantively.
I bow to the experts, but if you really want one, think out of the box. Think of a cone or oval. There is no rule that says it has to be a perfect circle where one loop is just above the previous or just under the next with a constant diameter. Mix the diameter of the track and mix short sections between. This will control the slope/grade of the route to keep it manageable for PW locos, Beeps etc to run. If you are thinking big-boys or some of the larger scale MTH stuff, you will have a lot more engineering to figure out - weight is a factor in buiding it. think of an 0-31 diameter and short trains. it will work. Also, if you do invest time/dollars, build a two/three track one.
From my table top to an under table storage yard double track...one up and one down to a freight yard where i store my stock and some engines....unfortunately not up and down the pathway at the same time...i did not allow for passing, even with the small engines. It isn't a visual, i need sit on the floor to see the operation. I began it after most of the benchwork/tabletop/trackwork was laid. A second undertable yard for my engines [principally] uses an incline to decend/ascend.
Note: in the layout it is located in a far corner and i must hand/knee to get there. While i'm still working on the wiring for some of the layout, i do take a train up/down with no issues unique to this design to test my wiring work [and for fun]...There are TMCC issues where i start engines in the yard before i throw the switches/routes to navigate them out. Helix or not, this will continue to happen until i get better hand/eye/brain control. Again hand/knee crawl to fix the issue which i do not find problematic at the moment.
I don't use RR-track [i'm a heretic on this] and pictures are nearly impossible. lighting and angles mostly. i figured out some of the lighting issue, but the angles are yet to be solved to get useful pictures...not a high priority for me.
Be brave! try it out
Ralph
I did some quick calculations for grade with the inches climbed per loop.
circle==6" rise===5.5" rise===5"rise
27-------7.07--------6.48----------5.89
42-------4.54--------4.16----------3.78
48-------4.00--------3.64----------3.31
54-------3.57--------3.25----------2.96
60-------3.22--------2.93----------2.66
72-------2.62--------2.43----------2.21
Bob Nelson
+I remember a store in Mingo Junction,Ohio that had a window display of a helix with a train going up and down.It did not connect to a layout and was a self contained display.There may have been a second train.This was with tubular track and I think it was Lionel.This was in the late 1940s' [I think].Could this have been a magnetraction display?
I have vivid recollection of this and saw it for several years and I don/t think I imagined it.
Anybody have any info?
I remember a store in Mingo Junction,Ohio that had a window display of a helix with a train going up and down.It did not connect to a layout and was a self contained display.There may have been a second train.This was with tubular track and I think it was Lionel.This was in the late 1940s' [I think].Could this have been a magnetraction display?
I have vivid recollection of this and saw it for several years and I don't think I imagined it.
Hi bob
your correct...
......but its a matter of being creative on the entry/exit.
the goal of the helix and whether its a layout centerpiece or a method for getting items to a different level has a lot to do with it.
ralph
Boyd,
Thanks for providing the helix/grade chart. Based on C = 2 Pi r, I agree with your calcs.
Would you have any idea how many cars could be pulled up which grade with how many engines (a. postwar w magnatraction), (b. modern w/traction tires)?
runtime
I'm afraid Boyd's numbers are a little optimistic, at least for tubular track. The nominal diameter is to the outside of the ties and sometimes a little more even than that, whereas the actual diameter between the center rails is what counts. For example, for O27 track and a 5-inch rise, the grade is actually 6.37 percent.
The actual radii, as I measure them, for O27-profile track, are 12.5, 15.75, 20.25, 26.375, and 35.25 inches respectively for O27, O34, O42, O54, and O72.
Another disappointment is that the clearance is reduced from the rise per circle by the thickness of the track itself and of any board that supports it, although a clever design could, for example, support the track with crossbars between the ties or inside the ties and dispense with that.
Thanks Bob,
You are precise and acurate as usual.
I still hope someone can answer my question about cars pulled/ engine(s).
Warning: Post contains math
May I suggest my favorite track, Marx O34, as an alternative to O31? Its diameter to the ends of its shorter ties is not even 3 inches greater. And it's 1/4-inch lower than O31 since it uses O27-profile rails. For example, the clearance of a 5-inch rise with a 5.63-percent grade in O31 can be duplicated with a 4.80-percent grade in O34. Conversely, the same 5.63-percent grade can achieve an extra .89 inch of clearance when done with O34.
Wes Whitmore wrote:I'm just glad someone finally pushed all the math aside and started testing! Thanks Jim.Wes
That's right! Try it!
And use the lightest cars you can find.
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