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On the for sale or trade forum there is a listing for a 3-Rail Stud-Rail layout.  It is a very realistic looking track system.  Can someone familiar with it explain how it works, who manufactured it and when?  I assume there is a stud sticking up between the ties and the locomotives had long slide shoe pickups but I am not sure and cannot tell from the pictures.  I would like to learn more about it.

 

Thanks much,  Jim Lawson

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You really need a non-roller type center pickup, as on the old Marx and all - the big flat plate.  The ties have tiny studs that are the center "rail" and the big long slide goes from one to the other.  

 

Try to run a roller center pickup on it and it doesn't work smoothly (sometimes the loco just sites there not making contact) and if you get it going, it sounds a bit like a bicycle with a playing card clothes-pinnned to the wheel.  And its probably not good for the rollers of the studs, either. 

 

I think Len2 on this forum has experience with studded center rail track.

Last edited by Lee Willis
Originally Posted by Lee Willis:

You really need a non-roller type center pickup, as on the old Marx and all - the big flat plate.  The ties have tiny studs that are the center "rail" and the big long slide goes from one to the other.  

 

Try to run a roller center pickup on it and it doesn't work smoothly

 

Correct.  And on that topic, the other O-gauger magazine had an article years ago about an inventor who had created "skis" having a C-shaped clip on top that would attach to the rollers.  Then the loco would ski over the studs.

 

Originally Posted by bob2:

 . . .  going 2-rail was less expensive, more reliable, and lots easier.

Definitely. It's not that it won't work, its just that it is a lot of hassle and requires the use of non-standard "stuff" making it rather hard going compared to three- or two-rail modeling.  

 

And if that third-rail bothers you from the standpoint of realism, probably having little dots in the middle of each tie will probably bother your sense of prototypical aesthetics, too.  

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