Phil G
Member
- Location
- New Zealand
Hi Martin,@Phil G @Hayfield @James Walters
Hi Phil,
As usual, I move a few inches forward, and you want to jump yards ahead.
My hobby is tinkering with the computers and machines to see what is possible, what works, what doesn't work. For my own amusement and recreation. What other folks want do with it, if anything, is entirely up to them. I'm not here to make recommendations.
Even if I was, I would be nowhere near ready to make any. So far I have got a pile of 4mm FDM COT test pieces, and I've tried threading rail into a few of them. It's looking good, but I haven't even got as far as building a full turnout in 4mm COT yet.
There are three separate considerations, it's confusing if they get mixed up:
1. integral chairs on timbers (COT track) -- OR plug-in separate chairs.2. resin OR FDM printing for each of those,3. how separate jaws are handled -- clip-in loose jaws with pins (resin only) OR glue-on stub jaws (resin or FDM).
1. For myself, I'm not much interested in using integral chairs on timbers (COT). Sliding rail into place from one end goes against the grain of my original motivation for 3D-printed track, which is to build track by dropping rails into place vertically.
For single turnouts, sliding rails is doable and matches commercial kits. But I'm not really interested in single turnouts, I want to build more complex bespoke formations and junctions, for which sliding rails into place is impossible or difficult. Plug-in chairs makes it much easier. It's possible to combine COT and plug-in chairs in the same timbering base, but anyone doing that knows what they are doing and won't be reading this.
But I know many modellers do just want single turnouts. Whether Templot is the best way to get them is a moot point. But to the extent that Templot makes it possible to produce them as FDM COT track, I want to provide the options and settings to get the best results.
Also in 4mm at least, COT track (in resin or FDM) makes it possible to match the height of commercial flexi-track. Again, that's of no great interest to me, but I know it's important for many modellers, and it's not possible with plug-in chairs in 4mm scale.
2. resin printing provides the best chair detail. No question -- and I can't see that changing any time soon, although FDM is getting closer. It is up to modellers how important that is to them. Resin-printed COT is iffy (see recent posts), and for most if you want COT it will have to be FDM.
For plug-in chairs the same quality difference applies. But if you don't want the faff of resin-printing and are happy with FDM quality you can produce FDM plug-in chairs using the COT chair settings. This can be for FDM timbering bricks or for laser-cut bases:
That could be a difficult decision in 7mm scale, where the quality difference between resin and FDM is not so obvious.
3. Whichever method you choose, some rails can only be assembled if the outer jaws are applied separately.
In resin, with full-depth timbers, those can be done using the clip-fit loose jaws with pins. It's possible to use them for every chair, in which case assembly of complex formations is much easier, there is never any need to slide anything onto a rail, and the check and wing rails can have neat prototypical flat square ends.
In FDM, separate jaws need to be the glue-on stub jaws instead. Much more fiddly to handle, and you wouldn't want to use them for every chair. Which means the other chairs will have to be solid jaw slide-on, and the rail ends will need to be chamfered to make that possible.
Phil, I've written all that at least once before. I can't keep repeating myself. I switched this site off over Christmas so that I could have a break from writing stuff.
My priority is to get 556b released as soon as possible, and there is still a lot to do.
cheers,
Martin.
I am sorry if you feel you are repeating yourself, that was not my intention at all.
. I am very awere your have created a brilliant system, that has quite a few options, because there are so many options, there needs to be decisions made by the user.
Once again you have summarized these above, although I think maybe one thing you did not cover above was the question of tensile strength or durability of PLA+ filament vs Resin. Maybe this question does not yet have any answers, as time is a factor here for sure!
Anyway clearly there are lots of options, each with there own pros and cons if we are being honest. At the end of the day each individual is totally free to make there own choices. ( yet another feather in your cap for that)
The real reason for asking you the question, what would you do with hindsight, was simply I value your input. It was never meant to be Martin says or anything like that.
cheers
Phil,
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