News & Reviews Product Reviews Lionel FasTrack track system

Lionel FasTrack track system

By Bob Keller | April 24, 2006

| Last updated on November 3, 2020

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SEVERAL YEARS BACK, Lionel’s then czar of engineering, Bob Grubba, tantalized Lionel Collector’s Club of America conventioneers in Minneapolis with the hint of a new track system. When hobbyists asked him if it would be a solid rail system like that of Atlas O, he smiled and said, “Think more along the line of Super O.”

Advance the clock a few years and we have Lionel’s FasTrack. It’s a new product, not a re-hash of Lionel’s postwar Super O track, and other than a shared O-36 curve diameter and the shape of the plastic joining tabs, there are no real similarities.

Let’s begin with the foundation.

Lionel’s track, like MTH’s RealTrax, S-Helper Service’s track, and several brands of HO track, comes with a built-in plastic base designed to look like track ballast.

FasTrack uses a textured gray plastic that has a rough, gravel-like feel to it. It is similar in look and feel to the roadbed on S-Helper Service’s S gauge track, but in thickness (.14 inch) the plastic is more akin to MTH’s RealTrax.

The height of the roadbed from base to top (not including rails) is just under half an inch. On top of each 10-inch straight section of track you’ll find 24 brown, cast-in ties. At first glance it looks like there are too many ties, but counting and measuring shows the number of ties in the track bed – scaled to O gauge dimensions – would fall within federal railroad standards.

The ties themselves are about 101/2 scale feet long and have a 91/2-scale-inch face. The 101/2 foot width exceeds Railway Tie Association norms, but not by much.

The FasTrack rails are tubular, but unlike traditional tubular track there is no attempt to model the familiar pinched silhouette of a rail.

In profile, they remind me of a 2-by-4 piece of lumber.

The rails themselves are 7/32-of an inch tall, shorter than standard 3/8 -inch O gauge tubular rail height, and close to the size of 9/32-inch height O-27 rails. For comparison, K-Line Snap Track rails are 9/32 inch tall, RealTrax rails are 9/32 inch tall, Atlas O rails are 7/32-inch tall, and GarGraves rails are 7/32-inch tall.

Electrical connections between track sections are made on the bottom. Flip the track over and you’ll see the flattened tabs holding the rails in place, as well as the bars connecting the outside rails. A powered “lockon” track section comes with the wires attached to the center and outer rails.

Each track section has a “half pin” on both ends of the center rail and a full pin on opposite sides of the outer rails. Any which way you put the sections together you’ll always have the right number of pins, which is good since the pins are not designed to be removed. Just like the rails, the pins are secured to the plastic base. Isn’t that slick?

To put track sections together, hold the sections in a slight “v” shape, line up the holes for the outer rails, and press the sections together. Use a similar technique to pull the sections apart. I had no trouble at all joining or separating sections.

Lionel says that when joined, the track is so solid that you can lift an oval of it into the air and it won’t break apart. So I tried it.

I carried the track up and down a hallway, and then hung it on the wall of our workshop for three weeks. It stayed together the whole time.

Back on the floor in our workshop, I connected the oval of FasTrack to a transformer and grabbed everything handy that would run on its 36-inch diameter curves.

That included Lionel’s Fairbanks-Morse H-16-44 , Alco FA and S-4, and EMD SD40-2 diesels; K-Line’s F7 and Atlas O’s RS-1 diesels, and a RailKing R36 subway set and Big Boy. All ran quite well. There was no evidence of any wear on the track, nor were there any derailments or flanges striking the tops of the ties.

FasTrack is a big step forward for Lionel, and initially is available in its starter sets.

Lionel president Bill Bracy told us that established operators are so interested in the new track that Lionel is stepping up its release of switches, different length straight sections, and different diameter curved sections.

Only time will tell whether FasTrack will put a dent in sales of RealTrax and Atlas O track, and whether it ultimately will supersede traditional tubular track. In the meantime it sure looks nice and works well.

10 thoughts on “Lionel FasTrack track system

  1. LIONEL SHOULD HAVE MADE IT IN THE SAME DIAMETERS AS THE OLD TUBE TRACK! THEY PROBABLY LOST A FORTUNE ON CONVERSION SALES WITH THE WIDER DIAMETERS. I'M ONE OF THOSE THAT WOULD HAVE RETRACKED MY LAYOUT BUT I'M NOT GOING TO MOVE EVERYTHING ON IT TO MAKE FASTTRACK FIT'

  2. I just finished my new layout a couple of months back. I used FasTrack throughout and am very pleased with the track system so far. The layout measures 8'6" x 13'10" in a "C" shape and runs 2 trains on the upper level and 1 train on the lower level. I adapted some of my track plan from the track plan in CTT's Sept. 2003 issue. My only complaint is, yes, FasTrack is very noisy! I should have used some type of sound deadening material. I have found that if I run my trains a little slower the noise is not quite as bad.
    Bob Schulz
    Parma, Ohio
    August 9th, 2009

  3. We sell lots of FasTrack at Scale Model Supplies in St. Paul, Minnesota. It greatly outsells even Atlas track. The only issue is that it is more noisy than other tracks but that can be remedied with sound deadening material under the roadbed.

  4. what is the best layout for a 1947 Lionel train set? Plus I need to replace the track . It's an O scale Train.

  5. Anyone familiar with track suspension systems from a ceiling mount such as the Jules System ? And do you like it ?

  6. Fas Track has made a huge difference for the average model railroader . Except for Hi Rail and scale enthusiasts, this system is pretty much fail safe and is so basic, you can still compliment it a million ways with your own creativity.

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