|
I tried this solution out for myself, and it didnt produce the best results for
rolling friction. Not to say it isnt a good solution, because I do see major
improvements, but just that there is a better one.
Adding the metal sleeve around the axle, lifted the wheels enough so that the
flanges werent touching anymore. When tested, I saw a major improvement in
rolling distance. However it also added more rolling friction to the wheels
(length of the sleeve pressing against the axle) so I knew there should be a
better way.
Instead of the axle sleeve being the entire length, I decided to try using two
bushings (axle sleeve cut down really short) at each end of the axle, but it
didnt help much. Might have been burrs in the inside for this test, because it
was really hard holding the bushing a filing at the same time. If you could get
rid of the burrs this might actually be a good solution.
The best solution would be one that prevents the flanges from rubbing without
adding any friction. A fellow Nelug memember mentioned cutting notches in the
wheel housing to give the wheel flanges more clearance. This produced even
better results than using the axle sleeve, because there isnt any added
friction.
All of the test were done on an up down ramp with a two plate slope (two plate
difference at each track connection) and eight baseplates in length.
Jon
|
|
Message is in Reply To:
50 Messages in This Thread:
- Entire Thread on One Page:
- Nested:
All | Brief | Compact | Dots
Linear:
All | Brief | Compact
|
|
|
|