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Trucks for Trains

Ray would like to hear some personal opinions on buying trucks and asks:

“When my dad, a model RR’er, passed away, I inherited his layout. He has a lot of cars, and some of them consistently go off the track. Are there some trucks which are “el cheapos”? If so, which ones should I get so my trains will stay on the track?”

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3 Responses to Trucks for Trains

  • Ken Malgren says:

    To directly answer your question, yes there “el-cheapo” trucks. However, replacing all the trucks could be a big investment.
    I would suggest starting with the track. Do cars derail at the same place? You can take a car that is a problem and roll it by hand over all your track and see if it derails.
    Also, use a NMRA gauge to check the width of the wheels. If you wheels are “in gauge” it’s probably track issues. I check all my cars about once a year for wheel gauge just to be sure. If wheels are badly out of gauge, you should at least change the wheel set.
    Good success to you.`

  • NJMatt says:

    I have the same situation- I have trains that wobble, and derail very easily.

  • Geof says:

    Ray,

    Ken’s comments are right on but something you should also check out is are your cars too light? Most manufacturers skip on the weight requirements (eg, they’re too light) but this is an easy fix by adding weight(s) until they meet NMRA standards.

    Since you didn’t mention what scale you are in, I suggest that you go to this web link to get the specs you should be using:

    http://www.nmra.org/standards/standards.html

    Look up your scale’s specs and see what weights you should be running (it varies by car length). You can pick up a cheapo digital scale on line, at eBay or at any store that sells kitchen equipment for about 10 or 15 bucks.

    Hope this helps,

    Geof

    PS The NMRA track gauge that Ken mentions can also be used to make sure your track’s gauge width is correct as well. Pay attention to switches (turnouts) which are usually common trouble spots.

    You also may have ‘pizza cutter’ flanges on your wheel sets. These are wheel flanges that are very thin and ‘sharp’. They can ‘split a switch’ at the points with no effort at all. If your derailing cars have these type of wheels/trucks, bite the bullet and replace them with better quality trucks (like Kadees if you are running HO gauge).

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