Sadly, I would venture at no more than maybe 5A. Flat out, the traces are just garbage thin on those circuit boards and don't forget- same manufacturing is the PCB down in the control box.
One day with spare time and have to go back and take pictures, but the club bridge, I had to do so many things. #1 we are not running track power through the bridge controller as originally intended. We are not isolating the tracks connecting to the bridge with the insulating pins- instead all three are solid pins. We disabled- and this is the part i don't remember the exact how on what we did , I just now it required moving some wire connection points under the bridge end sections to disable the train sensing. Last, in parallel to the bridge the tracks are bonded with no less than #12 wire to ensure in the event of a derailment or short, no current is passing from one side of the bridge to the other. This is especially true in a bridge up situation. Again, the idea was to isolate and augment in parallel the bridge electrically from one end to the other just like it was a piece of track with extra bonded together feeder wires. That way the electronics are still connected but not actually handling any track power and cannot control the leader tracks at either end. This means we must manually interlock so nobody can run off the track if the bridge is up. In fact, the bridge controller is not plugged in 99.99999 percent of the time and we only operate the bridge on the rare special occasion to hopefully not break it.
Hands down, even with all my knowledge, this is the most difficult, most complicated set of boards for a bridge I know of. There could be a dozen reasons why it's not working.
Could be one of the up or down optical flags is not in position at either end of the bridge- that's 4 potential spots for an error.
Could be the train sensing section- when you burned the trace, now that circuit cannot detect state.
I insist again, without even seeing it, there is NO WAY the screw had anything do with this. Even a big fat washer- there is no 2 points on the circuit board it was bridging in this location. It is a through hole via from one side of the board to the other just so that trace can route around the other components.
I'm not trying to not help, but at the same time, it's hugely impractical to fix this bridge. Shipping alone, no parts, and even touching the circuit board, you touch one solder joint and the trace just self destructs with heat. This is the impossible to fix bridge for all intensive purposes.
Again, figuring out what sensor is not in position, what error if there is an error on the circuit board, then when trying to fix one error not create 10 more in the process.
I would fix the trace by soldering a bypass wire. I know that should repair the visible damage we know about and is minimal risk of causing more trace problems. Beyond that, if it doesn't work, it's finding another bridge that does.