What's best for testing?
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What's best for testing?
I've now reached my least favorite stage of track building, fitting point blades and TOUs, and I'm wondering what's best to use to test their operation? The layout will mainly (exclusively?) see small 4 wheel wagons, so I've used a few of those, but I'm wondering if I should be using something else as well. Do I need to find something with bogies for a more complete test? What's the general advice for testing new track?
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Re: What's best for testing?
Gareth,
I test the track with the longest wheelbase locomotive that is likely to be used on that section of track. My reasoning being that if it will take the big one, the rest should follow.
Cheers,
David
I test the track with the longest wheelbase locomotive that is likely to be used on that section of track. My reasoning being that if it will take the big one, the rest should follow.
Cheers,
David
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Re: What's best for testing?
Longest rake you can assemble, propelling and pulling with a locomotive.
Anything less is wasting your time.
Anything less is wasting your time.
Tim V
(Not all railways in Somerset went to Dorset)
(Not all railways in Somerset went to Dorset)
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Re: What's best for testing?
Hi Gareth,
If you have a look at the following https://www.scalefour.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=39&p=54421#p54421 which is a post covering a course I am running for my group of "Starter" friends.
You will discover that I start testing while the point is being constructed using a long wheelbase wagon or van which is uncompensated and which has had the wheels checked for the correct BtoB and true running on a sheet of glass. I start before any check rails are fitted as the wagon should go cleanly through the crossing V without any sign of catching. Listen as you run the wagon through to hear any slight click. There should be no sound. I also show how to set the point blades temporally to evaluate the running quality. If all is OK on the track making jig then the check rails are fitted and the point further tested.
Once laid I do the same as Tim and David, again I check all the vehicles in the train first - I have a train load of 2 ounce uncompensated hopper wagons again all checked - including buffer height which I use as well as the longest wheelbase 0-6-0 I happen to have. Looking for smooth running I run the trainload back and forward at increasing speed until something happens.
If the point is fine then you should be able to run trains without any wagons coming off at scale speeds.
If the point is properly tested during the construction period then it likely that if there is a problem after laying then it is probably due to one or two of a number of things.
1) The point is not level and therefore there is a twist - there is a little gadget you can make to check for this - if you want to make one I could show you. It requires a couple of wagon compensating units and some brass wire. The twist could have come about due to an uneven surface - holes drilled through cork and not properly sanded down for example or a rivet not properly closed up properly below the sleeper.
2) If the point is an interlaced one it is possible to have distorted it between the making and the fitting - it may have gone out of gauge - I use a number of gauges to check during the fitting and do not assume that it will remain as it was on the jig.
3) The point blades are not correctly set when fitted to actuator. Correct gap? Correct height? Enough throw? - a number of possibilities.
4) Chairs or solder in the wrong place catching on flanges if fitted or parts soldered after laying. - filing down may be necessary. - I had an interesting example of this when a small 0-4-0ST loco I had built and which operated well on Dubbieside, but when I tried running it on the first section of Burntisland it kept cutting out - it happened that the wheelbase was the same as between pairs of chairs which had been fitted cosmetically and which were too high - lifting off the flanges of the locomotive!
5) There may be other possible reasons for incorrect operation of points - there is discussion elsewhere on the forum about problems arising from the incorrect use of gauges.
I have not covered laying and fitting out points yet on the thread, but hope to do this when we meet again after the summer.
Hope that is of some help.
If you have a look at the following https://www.scalefour.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=39&p=54421#p54421 which is a post covering a course I am running for my group of "Starter" friends.
You will discover that I start testing while the point is being constructed using a long wheelbase wagon or van which is uncompensated and which has had the wheels checked for the correct BtoB and true running on a sheet of glass. I start before any check rails are fitted as the wagon should go cleanly through the crossing V without any sign of catching. Listen as you run the wagon through to hear any slight click. There should be no sound. I also show how to set the point blades temporally to evaluate the running quality. If all is OK on the track making jig then the check rails are fitted and the point further tested.
Once laid I do the same as Tim and David, again I check all the vehicles in the train first - I have a train load of 2 ounce uncompensated hopper wagons again all checked - including buffer height which I use as well as the longest wheelbase 0-6-0 I happen to have. Looking for smooth running I run the trainload back and forward at increasing speed until something happens.
If the point is fine then you should be able to run trains without any wagons coming off at scale speeds.
If the point is properly tested during the construction period then it likely that if there is a problem after laying then it is probably due to one or two of a number of things.
1) The point is not level and therefore there is a twist - there is a little gadget you can make to check for this - if you want to make one I could show you. It requires a couple of wagon compensating units and some brass wire. The twist could have come about due to an uneven surface - holes drilled through cork and not properly sanded down for example or a rivet not properly closed up properly below the sleeper.
2) If the point is an interlaced one it is possible to have distorted it between the making and the fitting - it may have gone out of gauge - I use a number of gauges to check during the fitting and do not assume that it will remain as it was on the jig.
3) The point blades are not correctly set when fitted to actuator. Correct gap? Correct height? Enough throw? - a number of possibilities.
4) Chairs or solder in the wrong place catching on flanges if fitted or parts soldered after laying. - filing down may be necessary. - I had an interesting example of this when a small 0-4-0ST loco I had built and which operated well on Dubbieside, but when I tried running it on the first section of Burntisland it kept cutting out - it happened that the wheelbase was the same as between pairs of chairs which had been fitted cosmetically and which were too high - lifting off the flanges of the locomotive!
5) There may be other possible reasons for incorrect operation of points - there is discussion elsewhere on the forum about problems arising from the incorrect use of gauges.
I have not covered laying and fitting out points yet on the thread, but hope to do this when we meet again after the summer.
Hope that is of some help.
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Re: What's best for testing?
(In addition to the excellent suggestions above:) Run the longest-wheelbase non-bogie stock that you have, as it will be most sensitive to track twist. If you have nothing with a long wheelbase, perhaps borrow some stock to test with? Six-wheeled coaches would be good test-vehicles. Bogie vehicles are supposed to be more tolerant of track twist.
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Re: What's best for testing?
Guy Rixon wrote:(In addition to the excellent suggestions above:) Run the longest-wheelbase non-bogie stock that you have, as it will be most sensitive to track twist. If you have nothing with a long wheelbase, perhaps borrow some stock to test with? Six-wheeled coaches would be good test-vehicles. Bogie vehicles are supposed to be more tolerant of track twist.
I'd go with your coaches too. They will be the longest wheel base vehicles you have, and if the bogies are attached too rigidly can also be very sensitive to track twist. Lesson learned years ago when the club I belonged too built a curve with super-elevation. Everything except the coaches went round it fine. The coaches came strait off.
Re: What's best for testing?
Will L wrote:I'd go with your coaches too. They will be the longest wheel base vehicles you have, and if the bogies are attached too rigidly can also be very sensitive to track twist.
Quite. My newly laid points were working fine until I ran a rake of coaches over them and half of them derailed. Entirely my fault - it turned out i hadn't laid the points flat and there was a slight twist in them. That didn't show up with short wheelbase stock. But this really applies more to how you lay your points rather than how you build them.
DT
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Re: What's best for testing?
Thanks everyone, this has been really helpful. I'll try to use a variety of stock. In addition to "normal" wagons, I've got a LNWR D14 which has a 16' wheelbase. That's the longest rigid wheelbase I've got. After that I have a Bachmann Crocodile with P4 wheels, which did fine a fault that has now been fixed.
It seems I need to get some more stock, long coaches and pacifics...
It seems I need to get some more stock, long coaches and pacifics...
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Re: What's best for testing?
A piece of clear acrylic (Perspex) about the length of a four wheel wagon with wheels mounted in fixed compensation units is good since you can look through the acrylic and see where the wheels may be coming off.
Terry Bendall
Terry Bendall
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Re: What's best for testing?
That's one which I have seen before somewhere Terry - I might make one up for using on my own new layout with a couple of adaptions for showing twists and changes in elevation. Old grey matter churning around now! I hope to be ready to start on making and laying track by the end of this next week. Working on the baseboard ends today.
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Re: What's best for testing?
Allan Goodwillie wrote:That's one which I have seen before somewhere Terry
Although not my idea Allan. My good friend Barry Luck uses the idea and I seem to recall seeing it elsewhere as well
Terry Bendall
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Re: What's best for testing?
Terry Bendall wrote:Although not my idea Allan. My good friend Barry Luck uses the idea and I seem to recall seeing it elsewhere as well
No acrylic, but wires attached to the compensation units to make the relative movements clearer, perhaps? MRJ 57 page 230.
Regards
Noel
Noel
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Re: What's best for testing?
Well done Noel,
I knew I had seen it somewhere before and made a version for myself,clearly it shows that Dave Reynolds had come up with the useful idea and made it for a 10ft wheel base. I would recommend a longer wheelbase myself, but a very useful tool. I also have a Don Rowland diplometer to gauge just what is happening when building cant into the railway.
Thinking I might add all features together to make up a new unit which could be built to allow both multiple wheelbases and uncompensated as well as compensated. I have a lot on this week - so possibly next week. Dave Reynolds had made his as he was hoping to build a layout that basically did not need wagons to be compensated. I wonder how he managed to get on with his project.
I knew I had seen it somewhere before and made a version for myself,clearly it shows that Dave Reynolds had come up with the useful idea and made it for a 10ft wheel base. I would recommend a longer wheelbase myself, but a very useful tool. I also have a Don Rowland diplometer to gauge just what is happening when building cant into the railway.
Thinking I might add all features together to make up a new unit which could be built to allow both multiple wheelbases and uncompensated as well as compensated. I have a lot on this week - so possibly next week. Dave Reynolds had made his as he was hoping to build a layout that basically did not need wagons to be compensated. I wonder how he managed to get on with his project.
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Re: What's best for testing?
Another alternative is the Masokits Track Defect Detector...
I've had this etch for a couple of years and really must get around to building it. However it's having the pre-planning to order a pair of Exactoscale wagon wheels to go into it which is probably the main constraint. I look at an eight month waiting time, and wonder if I really can be bothered!
Cheers
Flymo
I've had this etch for a couple of years and really must get around to building it. However it's having the pre-planning to order a pair of Exactoscale wagon wheels to go into it which is probably the main constraint. I look at an eight month waiting time, and wonder if I really can be bothered!
Cheers
Flymo
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Re: What's best for testing?
Terry Bendall wrote:A piece of clear acrylic (Perspex) about the length of a four wheel wagon with wheels mounted in fixed compensation units is good since you can look through the acrylic and see where the wheels may be coming off.
I've had three perspex floored wagons as part of the kit which I take on the Society Stand for demonstrations for a couple of years. I'm sure a fair number of people here have seen them over that time.
The idea is to show those who are not familiar with the concepts of springing, compensation, and rigid suspension in an easy way. As has been mentioned, you can push them along and see the movement of the wheels on the rails and through crossings.
The perspex is about 5mm thick. I bought a 12" square for not-very-much-money from Ebay and scored and snapped it to size. It's a bit of a sod to drill and screw into though. To make the wagon effective as a test vehicle, you have to have the axles *exactly* square in all aspects. I did this by drilling holes through and using screws which were a fractionally loose fit, so could be aligned and then tightened up when the alignment is correct.
I hope this gives people some ideas on how this can be done. I've certainly found it a useful gadget to have around.
Cheers
Flymo
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Re: What's best for testing?
Flymo748 wrote:The perspex is about 5mm thick. I bought a 12" square for not-very-much-money from Ebay
Some the larger suppliers of glass also sell acrylic which is where I got my "offcut" Having bought some acrylic for another job I asked if they had any small offcuts. Out came a piece 6ft x 1 ft which will do all that I need and more for the price of a donation in the charity box on the counter.
Terry Bendall
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