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Hey Everyone,

I was wondering what kind of hinges are being used by some of you. On my truss bridge the hinges I used sit at track level. The bridge is installed so that when lifted it stays up until I put it back down. For this new project I don't have enough room to use those type of hinges on one of the bridges.

On one of them I used a free overlay frame-less hinge and it was very complicated and tedious to install. I would like an "under the bridge" hinge that will also keep the bridge up until it is put back down. Any suggestions?

Dave

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Hinge pivot point has to be at or above the track or the tracks will bind.

If the hinge raised the bridge deck level first then went up that may work.

I would elevate the bridge and hinge mech as a single unit, up above the track level first, then swing it the rest of the way up.

A chain or brake could stop the bridge at whatever  angle or level wanted.

As you have discovered, different situations require different hinges

My first "people" access bridges were hinged with the same type Dad used.  I used stop blocks as needed to keep the bridge up.  See attache pdf How To.

1 Hinges1 Open on Stop

My current bridges are more advanced.  See "Kit bash an Atlas 3-Rail Pratt Truss Bridge Kit with custom hinges and a gas spring".

When I didn't have vertical clearance for a lift bridge I used a swing bridge that swivels on a door hinge.

swSngSwng1swSwngHinge

See more information here "Toy Train Layout Wiring - Switches, Page 2"

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Strap hinges for bridge
totrainyard posted:

Hinge pivot point has to be at or above the track or the tracks will bind.

If the hinge raised the bridge deck level first then went up that may work.

I would elevate the bridge and hinge mech as a single unit, up above the track level first, then swing it the rest of the way up.

A chain or brake could stop the bridge at whatever  angle or level wanted.

This is what I did with my truss bridge.

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