For those of you who had 3-rail and went 2-rail, is 2-rail quieter than 3-rail at the same speed?
It would seem it would be, after all, you've eliminated 33% of the rail and the center rollers that ride on it. Given all other factors are the same it would only make sense.
Bob
A 2 rail layout may have 1/3 fewer rails but that ratio doesn't hold when you count the points of contact with the rails.
Take a 20 car freight train with two geeps and a caboose. It would have 192 wheels plus contact wipers in 2 rail. In three rail it would have 192 wheels plus a maximum of 10 rollers. That is about a 5% difference, not too much.
Every 2-Rail SCALE operating layout I have ever visited is MUCH quieter, than most 3-Rail layouts.
Most of us would agree with Hot Water about that. But I don't think that the major source of the difference comes from rolling stock, it comes from typical layout construction.
If you hang out with many three railers you are likely to hear the phrase "train table" come up in conversations about layouts. Many, many three railers have never read magazines like MR or any other source of scale oriented layout construction articles or layout construction books. You have a lot of 3 rail 4x8 layouts and many larger layouts are built by expanding in multiples of 4x8 sheets of plywood. Most three rail track is either tubular or comes with molded in roadbed. And often that sectional track is laid directly on the plywood which turns the sheet of plywood, often screwed or nailed to a 2x4 frame, into a highly effective speaker diaphragm. Screw another sheet of plywood to the bottom of the "train table", cut F holes in it and it would sing like a death metal band in an 11th grade talent contest!
Two rail layouts are much more likely to be built with 3/4 inch plywood cookie cutter sub-roadbed topped with homasote or cork supported by 1x4 open grid or L-girder benchwork. You won't be likely to find any hollow rails or 10 inch pieces of sectional track with or without molded in roadbed or any sub-36" radius curves taken at mainline speeds.
The Northwest Trunk Lines is a 3 rail layout with curves of 36" radius or greater (except for the 2 rail narrow gauge) built with 3/4" plywood or spline subroadbed, Homasote or Homabed above that and solid nickel silver rail with staggered joints over 30" apart soldered together with Right-of-Way fish plates. Carpeting and scenery deaden reverberations in the room. It is very quite.
If anyone has a dB meter bring it on over to the NWTL. Then measure the noise level at a similarly constructed 2 rail layout with a similar train at the same speed. An apples to apples comparison would be interesting.