I really didn't know how to ask this question,but I was at a train show this past weekend and observed how fast some of the operaters were running their trains,and some seemed so slow.
I also reviewed some of the past videos in the CTT video section and noticed the same thing,some seemed fast,others slow.
I run the real thing at work it really didn't dawn on me until now.Because you always hear the saying "You can't judge a trains speed because of it's size".
So,do we run are model trains too fast or too slow ?
I know Lionel has the speed indicator that's suppose to tell the speed of "O" gauge trains.But does anyone else notice this ? Or am I asking a dumb question
Collin ,operator of the " Eastern Kentucky & Ohio R.R."
Lionel collector, stuck in an N scaler's modelling space.
I'm guilty of running my trains too fast. But unless you have engines with constant speed control technology they tend to be a little fast. But thats O.K. because I dont want to watch a train run at a scale 10 miles an hour for too long. I think it would put me to sleep.
When CTT reviews a new engine they usually test its low speed to give you an idea of how prototypical it will run. Slower speeds means slow start and pick up rather than jack rabbit starts and stops. But in O gauge, running on O-27 or O-31 curves, our passengers are experiencing severe whiplash anyway. So if my engine starts out at a scale 20MPH its O.K.
In my opinion 3 rail O is a toy train. Not to be run prototypically. The HO crowd will run theuir engines very slow to be prototypical.
A hobby shop employee once informed me that "They're Lionels. They are supposed to be run fast."
When I was into HO, almost everything, including speed, was according to the book.
My current O27 trains are definitely guilty, at times, of speeding. I just "play" with them and don't really "watch" the speed.
Thanks for asking.
Way too fast.
I thought I had it slowed down and it still comes out to about 70mph.
But the "toy" effect matters not at what speed we travel, only how much fun we have.
The word "prototypical" should be banned from a 3-rail discussion.
"Can't we all just get along."
Bob Nelson
To me, it doesn't matter because my trains are not the real thing. I'm not endangering anything. So what? I say. If real railroads could run their trains faster than they do, they would. I run my trains fast because I can. Anything less than 140 smph is boring to me.
I run my freight rains slow but my passenger trains just look better zipping along.
Ed
Modeling the Baltimore waterfront in HO scale
darianj wrote:Yeah...I'm pretty sure I run mine too fast. I push the throttle just short of the "tipping point".
Me too! In fact my favorite loco is the oldest of the lot, a real beater but it hangs on like nothing else! That was what convinced me how good FasTrak is, especially those turnouts, just try taking any other at those speeds. In the De CTT issue on making railroads safe for kids I saw that captioned picture of two with TMCC having a 'race' and thought "Now that looks like fun!"
I live near FEC and CSX in Florida on the east coast and FEC runs their frieght trains about 50 miles per hour unless near a curve or coming to a passing zone or bridge. If it is the local frieght doing the cement plants it is very slow as it has to do switching about every half mile or so.
Have observed Amtrac on the other side of town between Lake Okeechobee and Indiantown doing around 80 miles an hour on CSX track. CSX runs thier frieght trains slower than FEC around 35 to 40 miles per hour and has more cars than FEC.
Seems that passenger trains always run faster than frieght.
On the train layout what ever speed seems to please you is what you should run, and at what ever speed the trains stay on the track
Lee F.
Doug Murphy 'We few, we happy few, we band of brothers...' Henry V.
A lot of what I own only has two speeds: off and ludicrous speed, so if they're going to run at all, they'll run fast. I run the train around the Christmas tree a bit on the slow side because it upsets my dog less that way, but even that low speed is much faster than a real train would run.
But as others have said, these are toy trains. Simulating real railroads isn't my idea of fun (I do way too much paperwork at work, and a fair amount of it at home too). Watching an old train highball around the tracks is relaxing, although I think the dog disagrees with me on that point.
Bob Keller
gvdobler wrote: The word "prototypical" should be banned from a 3-rail discussion.
My sentiments exactly. LOL
I guess the overall answer that I get is ,"what speed you run a "toy train" is correct because it's a toy".
But I also agree with phillyreading ,and have to say his speed is most likely the speed I run.If it stays on the tracks,it's the right speed.I think in my younger days I must of been speeding a few times.Yep ,they ended up in the floor !
On freights, pretty dang slooooooow. On passengers I try and duplicate PROTOTYPICAL speeds as close as possible. I didn't buy trains to watch a blur go by. I can stand out by the highway and watch semis-do that
Dep
Virginian Railroad
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