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Real Beginner Stuff - Track
- yarwak
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1. I have a mixture of Peco flex and Marklin fixed track. Can the 2 types of tracks be interconnected using standard Z joiners? (Peco recommends SL-210 joiners)
2. I originally tried to attach the track to the Marklin layout using nails, but this turned out to be a b____h. So instead, I'm trying a new method. I purchased strips of ballast - they're kind of like thin shingles. I was going to glue them to the roadbed and then attach the track to the ballast. I read a comment that it's best to 'float' the track. Questions: a) Does the gluing sound feasible and b) how do I 'float' the track.
Thanks in advance... Nick
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- Socalz44
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- ausman2001
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- Beverly56
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My track is going to have a pretty small radius, about 4.5", though I haven't gotten that far yet IBL doesn't make cork bed for radii that small. I have an unused 2.5 mm thick cork placemat and was thinking of just cutting it to size and using it under my track. Is this idea okay? If not, what thickness of cork should I look for?
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- ausman2001
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- Todd
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Can't tell you much about the Marklin-Peco thing, but I do know that one Z scaler here in Chicago told me that she used Peco flex with Marklin switches, so my guess is that it would work with Marklin sectional track. I personally can't use the Marklin rail joiners, I use Atlas N Scale Code 55 rail joiners for Micro-Trains Flex track and Micro-Trains rail joiners to join the flex to Marklin switches and any sectional track I'm using. The Marklin joiners are just too darned fragile for me.
Now on to cork. Itty Bitty lines is great stuff, but I needed a lot of roadbed, so I used Quartet corkboard cork sheet from a local home center. It is about 2mm thick, which works out to be about 18 scale inches, quite acceptable for mainline track. It is very easy to cut and very flexible. I would cut the cork into 12mm wide strips for curves, and lay them double wide on your centerline. Glue and tacks is the way to fasten it down, and I remove the tacks like the earlier post, but another trick is to buy a narrow wallpaper border roller and use that to roll out your roadbed after you glue it down. You can also sand out any bumps It does a great job in getting nice, flat roadbed.
I personally use nails to hold down the track because I am laying things out on the fly and there have been more than a few occasions when I have had to redo a few sections, and the nails make that a lot easier than glue. There are more some folks here that don't like track nails because of the appearance, and I would agree with them if I used Marklin track nails, which I don't. I use Walthers Code 72 track spikes to hold down the track as they are longer, thicker and a little less visible than the Marklin spikes. I did glue down a section of my track that was put in a tunnel and that worked out well. I put some Woodlands scenics tacky glue in one of those hypodermic glue applicators and squirted a little bit between the ties every few inches or so. Seems to be holding pretty well, and I plan on glueing down the rest of my track after I'm certain its where I want it. Hope this is helpful.
Todd
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- ausman2001
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- Beverly56
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- Socalz44
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- Beverly56
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Okay. No nails. Glue only. That's what I thought, but you guys got talking about nails and I thought I'd missed something You're right. I really should buy a good book on the subject. Or find a great website that explains a the nitty gritty.
Thanks for your straightening me out
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- Socalz44
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- loadmaster
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Can you use CA glue and what type of glue is this?
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- Socalz44
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- ULie
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Beverly56 wrote:
you guys got talking about nails [...] Or find a great website that explains a the nitty gritty.
I'm also had doubts about nailing down tracks, but then I found the "Nailfix" (free translation from the original German name), and I nailed down the track on my layout with it.
The point if you nail the track is that you have to keep your eye on two points:
If the nails have their head up to high, the engines will hung up on them.
If you push the nails in to hard the ties might break. Also then the track might warp.
So if you use nails like those from Maerklin then you have to set them with a wee bit place to let the track "float". This is also in the manual from Maerklin for their nails.
Besides, on the website I like above for the Nailfix you can also see a tool to remove those nails again. And the Nailfix is used without a hammer.
GreetingZ, HilZen,
Uwe
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- ausman2001
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Jim,
Okay. No nails. Glue only. That's what I thought, but you guys got talking about nails and I thought I'd missed something You're right. I really should buy a good book on the subject. Or find a great website that explains a the nitty gritty.
Thanks for your straightening me out
Might a mistaken impression have been given when I said that I tacked down the IBL cork roadbed? I certainly pull out the tacks before laying track!
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- Todd
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Let's get this nailing thing clarified. I am laying Micro-Trains flex on cork roadbed glued to pink foam or Woodland Scenics risers, not into wood or homosote, or anything like that. If I were laying track over wood, there is no way in the world I would try and nail it down. I can't even imagine the difficulty in trying to drive those Marklin track spikes into wood with a nail set punch, even if you could keep them from bending.
I don't use those big ol' shiny Marklin track spikes with heads that are about a scale manhole wide. I use Walthers code 72 track spikes with L shaped heads, and you can't see them at all since the L shaped head is really small and they are pre-weathered dark brown. I press the spikes in with my finger, and if I've done my roadbed and support structure correctly, I have smooth trackwork that I can move or rearrange very easily if needs be.
That said, I'm still going to glue the track down before I ballast it. A little belt and suspenders is not a bad thing here.
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- kvp
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