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Uncoupling Magnet Placement

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  • Member since
    November 2013
  • 2,775 posts
Posted by snjroy on Friday, January 6, 2023 2:23 PM

Before placing my uncouplers, I looked at my paper layout plan, and simulated, with my finger, a few operations to see where I would need to uncouple cars, including shuffling operations. My objective was to NOT use the five finger crane for that. I ended up with a few electromagnetic uncouplers on the mainline (to avoid unwanted uncoupling), and magnetic uncouplers for every track in my yard, right after the switch, where track is nice an straight. After two years of operation, I realize that I could have added an extra uncoupler on the mainline, but I can live without it. The five finger crane is only used to remove cars from the layout, including those with sticky couplers that need maintenance Embarrassed.

Simon

  • Member since
    November 2002
  • From: Colorado
  • 4,075 posts
Posted by fwright on Thursday, January 12, 2023 10:07 PM

Given that successful delayed uncoupling is VERY sensitive to very smooth operation of the locomotive and how free rolling given cars are, I am sticking with skewers for the present.  I have seen and been the victim of (not just on my layout):

  • Having the car surge or the locomotive pause just enough that the couplers disengage and re-center when doing a delayed uncoupling move.  Then the couplers recouple as soon as the no longer delayed couplers touch.  Rinse, lather, repeat.  Also known as the "Kadee Do-si-do".
  • Having to push a very free rolling light weight car into a bumper or other obstruction (often a finger across the track behind the car) to make it couple onto my train instead of bouncing away.  Also known as the "Bar that Car!"

Seriously, prototypical speed switching and delayed uncoupling requires a big step improvement in consistent weighting, equalizing rolling ability, track cleaning, and smooth running locomotives above the stock standard to be consistently successful.

Until I get my rolling stock to that level, deftly handled skewers and finger bars solve most of the issues.  Don't ask me how I know this.

Fred W

....modeling foggy coastal Oregon in HO and HOn3, where it's always 1900....

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