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I recently purchased the subject set  for my grand daughter and we both found it delightful though I noted some issues that really come down to quality control problems. In assembling the fast track some of the track did not simply snap together but in fact required quite a bit of force to join them. Fast track is relatively expensive but does not appear to be engineered as well as it should.

In running the set around the oval the coupler of one of the cars repeatedly opened separating them. I checked the manual and this appears to be a known problem. The recommendation was to use needle nose pliers to bend a pin. This set is not particularly cheap and it should not be necessary to bend pins to keep cars together.

The remote control aspect did work quite well and was easy enough for my 3 and 1/2 year old grand daughter to operate the train to our mutually delight. She was almost beside herself in her joy making what I spent worth every dollar.

JohnF

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I had the uncoupling issue with a Christmas themed starter set a year or 2 ago(the freight set with the little docksider that played some additional Christmas music).  I ended up swapping individual components out of I think 4 separate sets at my dealer to come up with one good set of all the cars (that would hold together going around a circle), as well as an engine that didn't have any problems.  I wasn't even running the cars through the tight O36 curves that come with these sets, I was running on O72 or O84, and many of them still came apart with even that little bit of swing as the cars went through the curves (or transitioned back to straight from the curve - I think it was some of each).

It's a bit depressing to know the coupler thing is so widespread that they now actually instruct a "bend a pin" fix in the actual manual....  You are right that they should leave the factory such that the couplers will both stay closed if not intentionally  set off by the mechanism and also should uncouple when intended (like most of the cars produced have for probably at least 60-70 years, with a rare defect exception here or there).

-Dave

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