By LGB yes.Are the LGB three way points only produced as R1 / 30Deg.?
It has those wierd Point Motors on it as well, I once had a double slip with them in. Never did work out how they worked.Henri - there is one here, currently on German eBay - finishing in four days...... only lists postage to Germany, but I'm sure he would post it to you if you asked nicely.....
https://www.ebay.de/itm/lgb-1235-dr...191294?hash=item3d68bc88be:g:7wYAAOSwE-xbHX~A
Jon.
It has those wierd Point Motors on it as well, I once had a double slip with them in. Never did work out how they worked.
Never tried it and got rid of it as it was not any use to me. I would think that with some hacking Newer LGB Point Motors but certainly my choice of Air Power would be feasible.I assume they can be replaced with more modern LGB point motors or manual switches?
Jon.
So delving back into my extensive and sometimes expensive set of Catalogues I found the following in my 1979/80 LGB Cat. So it is not an urban myth, the early LGB 3 way point was a mish mash of radius 660 MM Righ and 990 MM left and they match R3 points in geometry presumably due to differing lengths etc.
View attachment 238875 View attachment 238876
Even though part of a circle matches R3 sections, 22.5 degrees, the curve through the switch is not R3... so I'd be careful equating it with an R3 switch.
The 600mm radius is exactly R1, but the 990mm radius is not R3 (1198mm) but greater than R2 (778mm).
I agree - the over-all length and curve may be R3 or what ever but the actual curvature through the point may be sharper.I believe you completely missed my point, while the overall curve will "fit" in an R3 "space", the curvature of the switch inside is R1 and R2+...
So my point is the switch is not going to allow certain rolling stock through it that would be fine on a REAL R3 switch but not on an R1 switch.
There is no "flexibility" within the switch, you can't bend the rails.. and they surely do not flex as the train goes through it...
Greg