Running the flanger last
weekend proved a fortunate choice of activity to dispel the disappointment of
needing to cancel the first operating session of the new year. Not only was it appropriate for the snow and
ice conditions outside, but my selection of equipment helped me identify the
cause of the occasional derailments my crews have experienced at turnouts on
the mountain grade. Each time the
Broadway Limited Imports (BLI) SD9 derailed, I took note. A pattern of derailment at the turnout frogs
emerged.
Armed with my trusty NMRA
gauge, I finally turned it over to use the flangeway tabs on the top of the
gauge rather than the track gauge prongs on the bottom of the gauge. The problem became quite clear. Although the running rails were in gauge, the
back-to-back distance across the guardrails was too wide. The BLI SD9 had wheels set at the minimum
back-to-back distance. They were in
gauge, but right at the minimum. This
combined with the three axle truck configuration to “find” every place
flangeway back-to-back distance was wider than needed for the minimum gauge
wheelsets.
NMRA track gauge measuring
turnout frog flangeways.
The too-broad flangeway
settings was a systemic issue for my construction of FastTracks turnouts. Checking with local fellow FastTracks users,
I found they, too, had found the need for extra care and tuning of this
dimension.
The cure was
straightforward. I spent a couple of
days with a point file and other needle files (pictured) opening up the
flangeways. My flangeway widths cleared
the minimum standard, so my choice was to file the guardrail in the frog
assembly to provide the needed clearance.
This ensures the guardrail on the stock rail side will pull the wheels
toward the stock rail and away from the frog.
Although the solution was “straight-forward,” my fingers and fingernails
suffered through all of this. I reworked
some twenty turnouts over a couple of days.
Ouch!
While I was working on issues
highlighted by my flanger operation, I finally tackled a modest project at
Cascade Summit by installing the throw rods and knobs for the BluePoint ™ switch
machines at the base of the summit wye.
With modern diesel operations, we had not needed to use the wye. Helper sets had controlling locomotive units
facing both directions. The flanger
needed to be turned, though—the reason wyes still exist on the prototype
Cascade Line. This was a simple task
that finally rose into my action list.
Flanger set backing onto the
base of the summit turning wye. The
black knob is on the switch throw rod for the switch the flanger set is passing
through.
Another track maintenance item
tackled during this winter down time was eliminating several “sun kinks” that
had developed. Although we jokingly
refer to the bowed or warped track as a “sun kink,” the cause is quite the
opposite. Prototype railroads can
experience rail expanding with high amounts of sun heating, causing track to
bow out of alignment.
Though our model track might
bow in a similar fashion, the cause is not rail expansion. Quite the contrary, the rail is nearly
constant in length. My basement
temperature stays within ten degrees between winter and summer—not much thermal
expansion in nickle silver rail with that.
The issue is the shrinkage of the benchwork as the humidity level
drops. Such is the case with low (for
this area) outside temperatures. That
low temperature air gets heated up indoors and in the process dries out. The relative humidity drops and with it, the
moisture content of the wood benchwork and roadbed drops.
I had several track kinks to
maintain. The solution was to cut a
little bit off of the rail and then move and secure the rail and track back
into place. In most cases, this simply
involved reapplying the caulk I use to secure track. In one case, the rail had popped out of the
plastic spikes holding it to the ties.
There, I had to hand spike the rail back into position.
Over time, each of these
maintenance issues is resolved, leading to more reliable operations. I look forward to my full crew arriving in
early February to test my handiwork.
Plugging the needle files into a nice wood handle makes all of that filing a lot easier. I use one made originally for razor saws. The file tang is clamped in the collet and the tool is a lot easier to handle.
ReplyDeleteThanks for linking up the Y controls. Now, show Charlie what you did there.