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Modeling B&O- Chessie Bob K. www.ssmrc.org
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QUOTE: Originally posted by earthqu8kes could an SD40-2 or SD45T-2 take a section or two of 15" curves?
If you only have room for 18" radius, I would make two recommendations for you:
1. Limit your locos to 4-axles and your rolling stock to 50'
2. Switch to N scale.
18" radius is a horribly outdated holdover from the 1950s era and HO train sets (Tyco, Bachmann, AHM, Life-Like all sold their train sets with 18" radius curves). But all train sets had truck-mounted couplers.
If you're a little more serious about your modeling, 18" radius - unless you're modeling a narrow gauge line or a 1950s era short line - is a horrible curse. Even serious HO modelers think 22" radius is too tight! Look at all the HO layouts that get featured on MR....their minimum radius is 30" and higher!
If you like to run 6-axle locos, Superliners, Auto Carriers and 89' piggyback flats, 18" will not cut it.
I made the mistake of building my last HO layout with 18" curve snap-track. Eventually some equipment would just not run. I had to return a set of Walthers intermodal well cars that were connected by drawbars because they only run on 24" radius and higher. And even if they could navigate the curve, sometimes cars would take a tumble on the grades. I learned the hard way that it is IMPOSSIBLE to have a good modern-era HO scale layout with 18" radius curves.
I finally dismantled my HO layout a couple months ago.
I have since converted to N scale and pared my 4x12' HO layout into a similar trackplan in a 4x8' space. This time, 18" radius curves look just graceful.
With everything RTR in HO scale these days, there's barely any price difference between HO and N.
If you really want to stick with HO, then junk the home layout and build a nice display case. Join a club if you want to run your trains - they all have nice broad 30" and higher radius curves.
rayw46 wrote:Many of the 6 axel diesels will take an 18'' radius curve, maybe even a 15" radius, but will they stay coupled, especially to a 60' or longer car? Chances are, no. On my small layout I have a mimimum radius of 22", but I do use Atlas #4 Code 83 turnouts. My 6 axel locomotives have no problem negoiating these turnouts.
Six-axle locomotives can probably remain coupled to thier train if they have truck mounted couplers. A six-axle locomotive with body mounted couplers probably will not remain coupled to the train unless you have a transition curve (gradual change of radius. Rather than requiring adding a foot or so to the width of your platform that would be required to accomodate a 22 or 24 inch radius curve, a transition curve would require only an additional one or two inch spacing between parallel straight tracks (The centerlines would be 37 or 38 inches apart instead of 36 inches.).
SD40T-2 wrote:I have a couple of 2 axle indutrial switchers and they look good going anywhere. I have a few peices of track that are labeled with 12 3/4" radius (made by Jouef in France) and my switchers take the curve just fine.
If that's all you'll be running on your layout, then those tight curves will do just fine.
OK, a few things
a) Pick an early modeling era. I do 1970s, and occasionally run a SD40-2. it just handles the curves
b) try and forgoe passenger services. if you MUST, do passenger, pick shorter than scale length cars, and 4 axle F Units, and, with one exception, no F45's.
Also, do short cars to. even with body mounted couplers, they run fine.. no longer than 50 foot boxcars
follow these tips and you should (read: should) be fine