Skip to main content

Part 1. I decided to try a couple of loops of fastrack under the Christmas trees this year to accompany the tubular track. So far it has worked ok. The last couple of days I have been reconfiguring the tracks to incorporate 072 curves for larger engines. In doing so, I have broken several of the outside rail connectors by bending in the wrong direction I guess. I also had a center rail connector break. Is this common or am I really mishandling these tracks?

And is there a place to get replacement connectors. What I have been doing today is cannibalizing some extra pieces to get the little connectors I need. Hopefully I won't break more but if I do I don't want to keep taking good pieces apart.

Part 2. I had no problem connecting  straights. 036 and 048 curves. I am having problems connecting the 072 curves. They don't just snap in place like the other pieces. Which is one of the reasons I may be breaking them

I hope to make this experiment work



Thanks

David

Original Post

Replies sorted oldest to newest

Experienced the same thing.....I bought a full circle of O72 at York, in the fall of 2019, brand new from a dealer in Orange Hall. Got home and the connectors were very brittle.  A bunch snapped and broke when putting them together and pulling apart. Seemed like a different metal make up compared to Fast Track pins I already have. I have older fast track of different radius and NEVER had a problem.  Chalked it up to a bad metal run by Lionel. My fix was that I went to my local TS and bought the cheapest section, 1 3/4 inch straights, of Fast Track to cannibalize the pins. No problem with those pins. Just a pain to bend the tabs and take out all the broken pins. Hearing your story I'm hoping it was a bad moment in time for the metal pins for O72 in the manufacturing process.   

Chiming in on this; never had a problem, but bought 98% of all my FasTrack years ago. To take pins out (and then replace), is easy. Under the track, bend the tabs totally straight up on that section with a thin screwdriver and long-nose pliers. Then carefully pry up the rail itself from where it sits in the track - it's not hard, but use care, remove the offending piece and replace it, then do the opposite, exactly in reverse to get the track to sit back in its little groove.

This is also a great way to make insulated rails - just remove a rail joiner pin or two (I forget now, but same sequence for removal as 027 or 0 gauge track pin) and you will have an insulated section. You will need to buy the little pin fasteners used for track wire connectors, available from any good electronic shop. They are failsafe. Do one and you'll have the hang of it and save a lot of money on buying specialized FasTrack pieces!

Last edited by Virginian65

I have been using Fastrack for at least 10 years and haven’t broken any.  So far, at least, I haven’t encountered zinc past, either.  You do need to be gentle when separating Fastrack pieces.  I use a small pocket knife and a smallish flat blade screwdriver.  Use the knife to begin separating the sections then insert the screwdriver into the separation between the center and outer rail; just a twist and they pop apart.

Last edited by Danr

Great information. I now believe I was doing too much bending and twisting to  join and the unjoin the 072 curves.

I did disassemble a spare 10" piece to get the parts I needed to fix the broken connectors.

Great idea about making insulated sections.

Last night I searched the Lionel site and found the replacement center rail and outer rail parts and put an order in. Hopefully they are in stock. 

I still wonder about why it is so difficult to join the 072 curves to each other and to straight pieces. Some snap together readily but some will not completely have the plastic male/female connectors underneath snap together. That leaves a small gap between tracks. I haven't run anything on it yet, and thus I do not know if it will stay together or if the track pieces will separate.



I'll keep working on it.



David

Add Reply

Post
This forum is sponsored by Lionel, LLC

OGR Publishing, Inc., 1310 Eastside Centre Ct, Suite 6, Mountain Home, AR 72653
800-980-OGRR (6477)
www.ogaugerr.com

×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×
×