#4 turnouts have the tightest/shortest radius on the diverging track
#8 the largest radius
For passenger cars to LOOK good, use the largest # turnout you can. This minimizes the jolting and overhang that the car will go thru when going thru the turnout.
On the mainline you want the #8, you can use a #6 in the yard where you will be going much slower.
As for car length, it will depend on the layout.
My layout is "small" with 12in R curves. The 85ft cars hang out over the side of the track in the curves. And only a few cars and the train looks "odd" on my small layout.
I use the shortest cars that I can find, 40ft for freight and the "shortie" passenger cars (even if they are not prototypical), because the shorter train looks better.
There are several things happening with short cars.
- There is the "Lionel" effect. Your eye counts the number of cars, not the length of the cars. So a train with more cars "looks" longer.
- A shorter train looks more realistic on a small layout, vs a long one that is almost the length of the layout.
- Short cars don't look odd going around a tight turn, like a LONG car would.
I will use an EMD F-unit rather than the longer E-units, or an Alco FA/FB rather than the PA/PB for the same reason.
#8 the largest radius
For passenger cars to LOOK good, use the largest # turnout you can. This minimizes the jolting and overhang that the car will go thru when going thru the turnout.
On the mainline you want the #8, you can use a #6 in the yard where you will be going much slower.
As for car length, it will depend on the layout.
My layout is "small" with 12in R curves. The 85ft cars hang out over the side of the track in the curves. And only a few cars and the train looks "odd" on my small layout.
I use the shortest cars that I can find, 40ft for freight and the "shortie" passenger cars (even if they are not prototypical), because the shorter train looks better.
There are several things happening with short cars.
- There is the "Lionel" effect. Your eye counts the number of cars, not the length of the cars. So a train with more cars "looks" longer.
- A shorter train looks more realistic on a small layout, vs a long one that is almost the length of the layout.
- Short cars don't look odd going around a tight turn, like a LONG car would.
I will use an EMD F-unit rather than the longer E-units, or an Alco FA/FB rather than the PA/PB for the same reason.