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What Track Do You Use?

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  • Member since
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  • From: Lake Worth FL
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Posted by phillyreading on Wednesday, September 24, 2008 10:29 AM
 NH_Chris wrote:

How about "all of the above"?  The layout I'm building now (I call it "Quick and Dirty #4") is made up of what I had laying around after getting rid of most of the Realtrax from my last layout.  It has an inner loop of Fastrack, passing siding and outer loop of Realtrax, a few Ross switches, and then a yard made up of Atlas track leading to Lionel and K-Line tubular track and switches. 

I built a few Realtrax layouts, but became disenchanted after a few flaky switches that fried themselves.  I've had trouble with Fastrack similar to one earlier poster (works fine then loses conductivity at the joints), so it's on probation on this layout.  In my mind's eye, I will build my next layout will Atlas track and Ross switches.  

My son's 4x8 layout is all O-27 tubular, but I am thinking of changing it over to K-Line Shadow Rail O-31 tubular, with plastic ties.

NH Chris

 

This is probally the first time that I have heard of Fastrac having problems. The usual problem track is MTH Realtrax, switches going crazy most of the time.

I went with GarGraves because Lionel's switches around 12 years ago were terrible for 031 track. Thinking about replacing my two 027 switches with GarGraves switches, all my other track has GarGraves switches. For me GarGraves is a much better track to work with than Lionel Fastrac or MTH Realtrax.

Lee F.

Interested in southest Pennsylvania railroads; Reading & Northern, Reading Company, Reading Lines, Philadelphia & Reading.
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Posted by chuck on Wednesday, September 24, 2008 12:29 PM

I had one section of FastTrack go south apparently from something from one of our cat's (urinating or rolfing on it?)  This was a Christmas layout and the damage happened on the back side of the tree (as far away/as difficult to get to as possible).  Some kind of chemical "spill" started to attack the track, primarily from the inside.  I only noticed the "damage" when rust/oxidation began to appear on the bottom of the formed rails.   I pulled the affected section out and then disassembled it.  The entire inside plating was gone and the steel severly rusting.  This caused a significant drop in conductivity and that seems to have been why the trains behaved badly on that one section of O-36 curved track.

BTW, if you abuse the track joints you can get the pins to bend up/swell the rolled steel and that will also affect the track performance.  This damage is obvious and requires severe abuse of the joint, aka bending the track up or down a great dela more than normal assembly/disassembly would entail. Trains will "thud" when crossing a swollen joint.

When everything else fails, play dead
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  • From: Silver City, NM USA
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Posted by Deputy on Wednesday, September 24, 2008 1:44 PM
Gotta be some very corrosive stuff in cat pee and barf. My cat urped on top of our Dish TV control box and it got inside. It looked like slimey clear fluid...no chunks. Dish box conked out immediately. It wasn't turned on at the time, and it didn't turn on afterwards. For sure cat pee has ammoinia in it. Goodness knows what other chemicals are in it. Dead [xx(]

Virginian Railroad

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  • From: Lake Worth FL
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Posted by phillyreading on Thursday, September 25, 2008 10:05 AM

To chuck and Deputy,

I don't let my cats get near my trains!  Last time one of my cats got on the layout he swatted a caboose to the floor and moved several frieght cars. So needless to say NO more cats in train area!!  The cat incident was over four years ago

Lee F.

Interested in southest Pennsylvania railroads; Reading & Northern, Reading Company, Reading Lines, Philadelphia & Reading.
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    July 2006
  • From: Plymouth, MI
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Posted by chuck on Thursday, September 25, 2008 11:37 AM
Floor layout in the living room.  Hard to keep them away.
When everything else fails, play dead
  • Member since
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Posted by phillyreading on Thursday, September 25, 2008 12:27 PM

chuck, have you considered installing byfold doors or using sheets of plastic to keep the cats out? Otherwise you need to move your layout to a cat-proof area.

Lee F.

Interested in southest Pennsylvania railroads; Reading & Northern, Reading Company, Reading Lines, Philadelphia & Reading.
  • Member since
    October 2006
  • From: Silver City, NM USA
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Posted by Deputy on Thursday, September 25, 2008 12:51 PM
I am the same as Chuck. Layout is on 4x4 plywood sheet that the Christmas tree also sits on.
I did buy some spray stuff that is supposed to keep cats away. It works good, but you have to use it about every other day.

Virginian Railroad

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  • From: Philadelphia
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Posted by PhilaKnight on Thursday, September 25, 2008 1:24 PM
I have a saying "If it ain't broke don't fix it" and "Sometimes change is bad" So I use good old fashion Tubular Track O and O27. I have tons of it and it is still good so I never bothered to get into the others. I have some Super O just enough to go on a 4x6 layout.
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  • From: West coast, USA
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Posted by rlplionel on Thursday, September 25, 2008 2:45 PM

 PhilaKnight wrote:
I have a saying "If it ain't broke don't fix it" and "Sometimes change is bad" So I use good old fashion Tubular Track O and O27. I have tons of it and it is still good so I never bothered to get into the others.

 Ditto the above for my layout.

Robert

http://www.robertstrains.com/

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