Originally Posted by J Daddy:
Has anyone here tried to bend Atlas flex track into a radius of O81 or smaller?
This stuff seems impossible to work with.
No matter how hard you try, the last 3 inches of track remains straight when constructing a radius. I have tried bending with plyers, cutting off the end, trying to put slight kinks in the ends of the rail but I still get a major joint falure with the ends coming together.
The frustration paramounts when the ties snap off the rail... there goes another 22 dollars!
Any hints would be appreciated. Thanks
Sorry to hear that you had so much of a problem. I keep reading about people who do. I didn't.
I have about 300 feet of Atlas track, the vast majority, about 250 feet of it is flextrack. This is something I learned decades ago with N and HO - flextrack is just so much easier to install: since its flexible I can fit it to curves and straights and bend/twist it just to the shape I want, and I can blend curves: no alternating 72 and 84 inch curve sections to get 79 inch diameter, etc.
I installed half circles has tight as 42 inches, and I have one section that is ninety degrees at 36 inch. Not sure I have any secret, and i'ts not easy, but its not hard, either, just takes good procedure.
The only thing I seem to do differently is I screw down the track at every hole, and sometimes drill additional ones. What I do is:
a) I install one end of the flextrack where I want it, and screw down the first two or three screws from that end in place.
b) I then bend the next couple of inches, holding the track a foot of so out for leverage, being gentle, and screw it in place, and work my way along the track, bending and screwing it down.
c) when I get about a little more than two-thirds way along, I bend the piece gently the eventual shape, mark where I have to cut the rails to even them up (If it curves I have to cut two of them to keep the junction end flush). I use a cutting wheel tool to do that.
d) I install clips and attach the next piece, usually also flextrack. Now, I always solder all three clips at every junction on both sides of the junction, well. I started this for electrical reasons but it is a good structural reason.
e) So, with the end of the first piece still not completely bent into shape - i.e, at this point it is 2/3 installed and screwed down but the remaining 1/3 is straight and not screwed down, I now install the next piece of flextrack to it and solder it, too.
f) I then continue bending and screwing it down a few inches and screws at a time, right through the junction into the next piece, and solder on another piece when it is 2/3 installed.
That is the basic method I have used.