Originally Posted by david1:
The outside rails look hollow not solid in the picture. Looks great though.
Super O rails are not solid, except for the thin bar like, center rail, and the pins are flat & quite thin, but strong. The snap fit works well to hold things together.
Originally Posted by palallin:
Ditto! Much superior to FT except that it would have cost more to produce, of course.
Originally Posted by Forrest Jerome:
If if this had been available with O-54 curves and switches, when I started layout construction in 2001, I would have looked at it closely. Went with Atlas nickel silver.
Its simple track, the quality of the piece produced would have been reflected in the price sure, but you get what you pay for.
Originally Posted by Andy Hummell:
Many years ago, the gentleman who designed both FasTrack and the proposed "Super O 2.0" posted the story of both systems' development here on this forum. It was a very interesting read.
From what I remember, the new Super O system was ultimatedly rejected as they thought it couldn't get a big enough share of the hi-rail track market (vs. Gargraves, Ross, Atlas, MTH ScaleTrax, etc.).
Andy
Like they captured a greater majority in that market with Fastrack?
(that's aimed at Lionel, not you)
Originally Posted by Notch 6:
Originally Posted by ZWPOWER13:
Fast Track is not the answer.....
Hate to say it Mark, but that ship sailed over ten years ago. Fastrack is here to stay, way too much invested at this point. That being said, I would also like to see this added to the line, I'm just not sure the market could sustain it without a HUGE number of additional track pieces being added to the line. Still fun to see what could have been though.
I think S.O. would have greatly outsold Fastrac had they been released "head to head".
Originally Posted by rtr12:
Personally, I am sold on solid rail and I use Atlas track. I also like Fastrack and think it is a well designed and well thought out track system. I actually like the looks of it too, but it's hollow rail and noisy, my main reason for going with solid rail and Atlas.
After seeing your picture above, I sure think the Super-O track would have been a better choice. It looks better, has solid rail, looks like wood ties and can be used by itself or with the added road bed. This really seems like a better idea to me, and may have appealed to a lot more people than Fastrack. Wonder what the reasoning was for not using I and going with Fastrack. Interesting topic.
It isn't solid rail, and the roadbed is "new". Noise? I found it a bit quieter than GarGraves. The SO click clack at rail joints is very unique with two small clicks each joint on the center rail. The center rail sound is unique also being a thin bar of copper VS a "normal" rail
So far nobody has noted the softer rubbery plastic had obvious sound dampening qualities.
Or mentioned the center rail clips did pop up on occasion, turning that rail joint into a obstacle for the roller to jamb up on.
And last but not least, And it took many, many, hours of run times, but that thin center rail, did carve a near "slot like divot" into the "soft" rollers some engines had. Slide shoes too And its really an issue, to have good track work and clips when using a slide shoe engine too. They tended to pop the clips up more often.
I think FT may have been a happy experiment as stated. And looking at this photo, its hard not to believe SO had a great impact on FT.
I had heard rumors the SO expansion wasn't pursued because a roadbed version was planned, but a hard enough non scuff material was lacking. A hollow roadbed in SO plastic warped and drooped with out major webbing, and a solid roadbed wasn't in the cards for some reason.
The fastrack rail joint "pins" looks like a modern safety improvement on the great, but likely too thin SO pins, for satisfying "modern" safety standards with kids.(Go lock the kitchen knifes up too) Yep I punctured me thumb with one before. And did it with staples, nails, pins on a new shirt etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. It's called learning .
The closest thing to Super O made I've seen is the K-line snaptrack (?). I think this is the RMT track now. Its black color is the biggest difference and when I first saw and held it, I thought for sure it was S.O.II.
Except for the rails, and color, its very close to S.O.
When the day comes I need to make the choice again, it would be S.O., then RMT/K-line, or GarGraves after a price and availability check, then tubular.