Kissfan113 said:I live in Cass, and worked on and around Shay engines for several years. nothing like the feeling you get with control of the throttle bar to 162 tons of powerful steam locomotive. Kevin
Kissfan113 said:I live in Cass, and worked on and around Shay engines for several years. I was a brakeman on the train, Shay 5 is truely a piece of work, it still pulls hard, the prettiest is Shay 4, Shay 2 has a lot of grunt, it is small but it is a Pacific Coast designated engine, the only one of it's type to opperate east of the mississippi, Western Maryland Shay 6 is a behemouth, I have actually had the opportunity to control that monster, nothing like the feeling you get with control of the throttle bar to 162 tons of powerful steam locomotive, Shay 11 is a nice engine too. I reccomend a trip to Cass, watch the real engines work.
Kevin
i personally don't care for the sd45 loco's, but that 20v645 engine under load does sound good
Now, the big Deutz in the CW60's is one healthy sounding motor, as are the "H" series EMD 4 cycles.
Vaughn MacKenzie said:Here's a video for train lovers- an old F10A #413 working a commuter train in Danbury CT recently: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Xd-YVFk0Aw
Love the generator whine of those first-generation diesel locomotives. This isn't no tourist line or excursion train locomotive. This thing has been working the rails like any everyday diesel since the day it was put into service. Engines newer than 413 have been put in museums or restored for vintage rail excurions for many years.
#413 went into service December 1946. It has been in continual use since then. Happy 60th B-Day #413
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nickleinonen said:all the new stuff is wabco "fastbrake" now. . i personally like it [any equalizing leak will not effect the pressure maintaining of the brake pipe], but the crews don't. ac motors have db that works great, dc motors db works ok at high speeds, but not near as good at low speeds. . i had a csxt on shop tracks making some moves. . just for hits, i used db, and on that ac4400, the db was almost as strong as ind. brake. i was impressed. i have no real ac experience though, as cn won't be getting ac anytime soon [until emd & ge stop making new dc units, or until cn aquires another RR who has ac power: kcs maybe?]
nickleinonen said:you do a 10psi reduction in equalizing, then it in turn makes a 10psi drop in brake pipe. .
rbattelle said:That's part of what I find confusing: less brake pipe pressure = more braking force. It's backward!
I've played around a bit with a train simulator, and I can't seem to operate very smoothly (bring the locomotive to a stop exactly where I want it). The freight brakes always screw me up because you have to apply full pressure to get them to release.
I think if I had the chance to see the system in person, both the mechanism and a demonstration of how it works, I could grasp it.
Ryan