As the attached picture shows; to stop cars from derailing, I had to install a tube over the original spring inside the Bachmann track piece.
With small wire cutters, a grinding wheel, and tiny file, the copper tube was notched at the spring mount side, to firmly fit into the spring mount. It should have also been epoxied into the mount, but not having epoxy I used aquarium silicone. With needle nose pliers the tube was pinched at the far end, to reduce movement of the spring inside it. Also the far end was filled with solder, to eliminate any spring movement.
After that ridiculous amount of fabrication, now a train can go forward or backward over the switched section, and forward and backward over the strait section, without derailing.
Separate from the fact that most consumers could not do this fabrication/repair themselves, this is not the proper solution because there is no reliability testing. Only a manufacturer has the resources to do that. Perhaps the copper tube will come loose after a few cycles, and the remote then has to be disassembled and repaired? Or the tube was too long and now the excess tension causes the solenoid actuator to fail after a short number of cycles?
The answer was a simple large increase in spring tension.
I like Bachmann products, but the managers/executives/board members running the company, don't know what they are doing.
Daniel Lee
PS the Bachmann website isn't allowing me to upload a picture of the inside of the repaired remote, so I'm trying to upload a tiny picture of it. That failed too, so I'm trying to post with no picture at all.
With small wire cutters, a grinding wheel, and tiny file, the copper tube was notched at the spring mount side, to firmly fit into the spring mount. It should have also been epoxied into the mount, but not having epoxy I used aquarium silicone. With needle nose pliers the tube was pinched at the far end, to reduce movement of the spring inside it. Also the far end was filled with solder, to eliminate any spring movement.
After that ridiculous amount of fabrication, now a train can go forward or backward over the switched section, and forward and backward over the strait section, without derailing.
Separate from the fact that most consumers could not do this fabrication/repair themselves, this is not the proper solution because there is no reliability testing. Only a manufacturer has the resources to do that. Perhaps the copper tube will come loose after a few cycles, and the remote then has to be disassembled and repaired? Or the tube was too long and now the excess tension causes the solenoid actuator to fail after a short number of cycles?
The answer was a simple large increase in spring tension.
I like Bachmann products, but the managers/executives/board members running the company, don't know what they are doing.
Daniel Lee
PS the Bachmann website isn't allowing me to upload a picture of the inside of the repaired remote, so I'm trying to upload a tiny picture of it. That failed too, so I'm trying to post with no picture at all.