It takes an iron man to play with a toy iron horse.
Brought to you by the letters C.P.R. as well as D&H!
K1a - all the way
Jim
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QUOTE: I am probably the only person stuck at a crossing who is SMILING.
QUOTE: Originally posted by CP5415 FUN! Now that's a word that we don't hear very often around here!!! FUN running trains! I guess some people want everyone to run prototypically than have FUN. To each there own I guess. I know that most kids want to see a train going round & round than do a lot of switching. I know my 4 year old daughter like to run trains around & around Daddy's layout & I'm using 22" on the mainline. Never had a problem with de-railments. Never had anyone complain about the overhang of the cars or locomotives. So, what is the problem then? We obviously have a teenage here with limited income that want's to run large locomotives around a layout that he's putting together & instead of encouragement, he's getting put down by people who say running on an 18" curve won't run well or look right so what's the point! It's no wonder we don't have many younger people in our hobby as most of the elders are pushing them away saying "Don't do that, that's dumb!" People need to learn about our hobby. I learned as I went. I started off with 18" curves & had no problems with it. So why can't today's younger generation learn the same way? Just my rant for the moment! Gordon J. Drew Oshawa, ON
QUOTE: Originally posted by alexander13 I was wondering weather 6 axle locos will run on 18"curves, as I may be able to get some in the near future. i know i have limitations, like no 2-8-2 steamers, but i am stuck with 4x8 till i get a big shed, happening soon. Thank you alexander13
QUOTE: Originally posted by Soo Line fan I run the following 6 axle engines on 18” curves with no problems whatsoever: Kato SD-40-2 Kato SD-45 P2K SD-60 P2K SD-60M Athearn F-45 Atlas/Roco SD-24 Atlas/Roco SD-35 Jim
A Veteran, whether active duty, retired, national guard, or reserve, is someone who, at one point in his or her life, wrote a blank check made payable to "The United States of America" for an amount of "up to and including my life."
One way to determine if an engine is struggling through too tight a turn is Amp-draw. I did some testing last night to see if current was going up on any of the locos on my list. I used a DMM with a recording feature so I could see Min/Max Milliamps for the entire run. At 100% throttle I saw a max deviation of only .060Ma. This is hardly an amount worth worrying about. Once upon a time I was about to make my first purchase of a quality engine. I wanted a Con-Cor/Roco SD-35. The hobby shop, which has long since closed, talked me out of it. They stated it would do nothing but derail due to my curves, so I bought the GP-38 instead.
One day I found a damaged SD-35 on the mark down table and bought it for parts. I could not resist repairing and running it. To my surprise it ran just as well as the GPs.
I have since determined most modern plastic engines today have enough lateral play in the trucks to allow operation on 18” curves without any derailments or binding. If you are having trouble keeping a car coupled, try an extended shank coupler. Jim