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#1
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With one of my other hats on, that of a model railway enthusiast, it struck
me that the packs of flexible track supplied for gauges N, OO, O and 1 would make nice rigid balanced feeders. |
#2
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On Thu, 28 May 2015 18:18:14 +0100, gareth wrote:
With one of my other hats on, that of a model railway enthusiast, it struck me that the packs of flexible track supplied for gauges N, OO, O and 1 would make nice rigid balanced feeders. And sooooooo inexpensive. :-\ |
#3
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On 5/28/2015 12:18 PM, gareth wrote:
With one of my other hats on, that of a model railway enthusiast, it struck me that the packs of flexible track supplied for gauges N, OO, O and 1 would make nice rigid balanced feeders. Now you've gone too far Gareth. :-) Next you'll be thinking anti-gravity technology would only be good for hanging antennas. There is life beyond radio. |
#4
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gareth wrote:
With one of my other hats on, that of a model railway enthusiast, it struck me that the packs of flexible track supplied for gauges N, OO, O and 1 would make nice rigid balanced feeders. Steel, ties likely not UV resistant, cost per unit length, marginal connections between sections. Brazing rod is much cheaper for sections up to a few meters. -- Jim Pennino |
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