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THIS IS THE TEST SITE OF EUROBRICKS!
THIS IS THE TEST SITE OF EUROBRICKS!

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  • 3 months later...

I've looked around the third-party stores a bit, but it's always possible to get more specific on what you want, until nothing is right.

Does anyone produce smaller wheels intended to work with the metal axles (in the 2878 holders)?  I'm trying my hand at a 6 wide passenger train (digital-only so far) and coming up with an aesthetic issue where the locomotive's floor is a good bit higher than the passenger cars, seems like 33" wheels on the cars and 40" on the locomotive, so the livery (same height horizontal stripe on everything) doesn't want to sit in the right place, as it's basically the floor of the locomotive and the lower edge of the windows of the cars.  Being able to lower the floor of the cars by a plate would help; the part substitution I have in mind is to go from #5 (small) to #3 diameter wheels, which would avoid needing custom holders.  

KWHP87V.jpeg

#3 is 1 plate smaller radius than #5, so the new flange is the same size as the original rolling surface.  The side decorations I have mocked up here wouldn't work, but the coupler and truck in general do.  A more complete solution would be #4 wheels in a holder that puts them 0.5 plate closer to the floor of the car, giving it this same height but with wheels that fill the space better, but making custom wheel holders seems like a much bigger job.

In the meantime I'm probably just going to treat it as one of the quirks of 6-wide (like cars being half as long), it's just when I zoom out and look at the overall colour blocking of the livery that I'm not super happy with how much black 'underside' the locomotive has, and when I compare to reference photos, the one out-of-scale problem is that the entire train is 1-1.5 plates higher than it should be.

Is there a thread for converting PF switches/points to 9v; specifically around any bridging that needs be done to keep the 9v integrity; I've added copper tape to the X crossover but the trains stop dead on them [guessing as power isn't going across the gaps] and so want to know how those with more knowledge than me overcome that? Small drill hole and wire under the track, with copper tape holding the poking ends down to the rail?

Theres fantastic stuff out there to cha get geometric, repair cables etc but not finding anything specifically for getting power across points (on converted track)

  On 9/2/2024 at 12:29 AM, Stereo said:

Being able to lower the floor of the cars by a plate would help; the part substitution I have in mind is to go from #5 (small) to #3 diameter wheels, which would avoid needing custom holders.  

Using ball bearing wheels you can lower most trains a plate below what is feasible with normal train wheels. You can do that with technic axle wheels too, but they have a lot of friction. Problem is, the normal tran base has a one plate tall hollow underneath that completely hides the bogie plate, so I think it comes out the same when you use train bases. I don't think the #3 wheels would work in the normal train wheel holder, I suspect there is not enough clearance on the underside.

I think the bottom half of the train base is what it can eliminate, yeah.  Just eyeballing where the wheels are, it'd probably be ok to have it under a lower train base on larger curves but not R40.

I suppose I can 3d print 8 each of #4 and #3 and see where that gets me.  That's a longer term project though, as I've found out Shapeways is out of business, so I'll need to find a new source for accurate prints.  Luckily the only really key dimension is the 2mm hole for the metal axle and I can drill them to size if needed, anything else being correct just makes it roll more smoothly.

  • 2 weeks later...
  On 9/9/2024 at 4:58 AM, Stereo said:

I'll need to find a new source for accurate prints.

I found a local printer for them, I'm still calling them "#3" and "#4" but actually it turned out the truck wheels are slightly different in dimension from the ones meant to go on axles, so more specifically it's 1 and 2 plates lower diameter than the regular kind, rather than in the standard aftermarket wheel dimensions.  In short summary, both sizes work fine in the trucks, though the smaller ones leave less than one plate clearance below the train.  I'll post about it in a topic once I have the train built, as it's mostly an aside to that.

I really hate cutting into official lego-- does anyone know anywhere to pick up the "ridged" or "flex" hosing that lego uses or something similar that fits the lego tolerances?

  On 9/22/2024 at 4:37 PM, Dhivael said:

I really hate cutting into official lego-- does anyone know anywhere to pick up the "ridged" or "flex" hosing that lego uses or something similar that fits the lego tolerances?

In the name of full disclosure, in some sets Lego does specify to cut their hose down to size and I've heard some lego purists say they would never use 3rd party hosing. Disclaimers aside, the following thread holds answers, enter the dark side at your own risk (insert evil laughter here)

 

is 8w or 10w the best scale? i built my train in 8w and it turned out pretty good

  On 9/27/2024 at 5:31 PM, trucks3 said:

is 8w or 10w the best scale? i built my train in 8w and it turned out pretty good

Honestly, there is no 'best scale' @trucks3. It's all subjective to the builders tastes and personal preferences. For example: I mostly build 6 wide, as I like matching the official LEGO City trains. I do build some 7 wide things for steam locos, but anything beyond that (8, 10, or bigger) I don't do.

  • 3 weeks later...

Speaking of scales, 8 studs to 10 feet

 

 

 

 

  On 9/22/2024 at 4:37 PM, Dhivael said:

I really hate cutting into official lego-- does anyone know anywhere to pick up the "ridged" or "flex" hosing that lego uses or something similar that fits the lego tolerances?

Hello,

don't know if it can help, but actually i discovered that standard electric wire 1x2,5mm fits perfectly in the 48729, 2555 or 15712 part.
I've used a black wire to make a handrail in my train turntable platform.

Here the platform with the handrail : https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/54080283542_cf5c9ab618_c_d.jpg

Here the control room with the handrail : https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/54081406098_4a28dc4d1c_c_d.jpg 

Here the wire on a locomotive : https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/54080338077_393647d40f_c_d.jpg

You can remove the copper inside the tube to make it more flexible, or keep it to model hard-to-reproduce shapes.

Hope this helps, any comment and suggestion is appreciated!

 

 

  • 4 weeks later...

Hi, will the 12v central power rails fit in the centre of the modern plastic track, or do they only work with era correct rails and sleepers?

  • 2 months later...

This question serve as technical foundations for my brick-built track system, so I'm asking here. Please note that I only have Stud.io to work with at the moment and can't test anything out in real life.

I want to hold the blue plates in place at the precise angles and positions seen in this image, but without using the R40 curved track itself.
680815835_Screenshot2025-01-11213252.png.b2a2814f883f09254bed8be6462bd964.png

I'm currently looking for any "legal" ways of achieving this goal using hinge pieces or Mixel joints and have surrounding structures and potential baseplates to hold the whole thing in place. After some tinkering, I have came up with the following assembly for the inner side of the sleepers. Note that one end of the assembly is more inset than the other by one stud:
2096725787_Screenshot2025-01-13220848.thumb.png.d70f19b325d98c4f24cf526af7b74858.png

Do keep in mind, most of these are still not tested IRL, as I do not have the means to do so, therefore can any of you confirm if this assembly works or is even legal? If not, I would like to hear some suggestions, preferably legal building techniques that don't involve tubes. Thank you very much.

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