QUOTE: Originally posted by robmik QUOTE: Originally posted by ab1rab The ten foot rule idea is rot. IF your eyesight is still 20/20, you can count scale rivets from ten feet in 1/20.3. You can see every board on a boxcar. People talk about the ten foot rule, but they mean a myopic ten feet, or an eyes shut ten feet, or an I don't give a cuss ten feet. Ten feet scales out to 200 feet in reality. You can see a half inch target at 200 feet . You can see if your wife looks angry or unhappy at 200 feet. At 200 yards you can easily recognize a human face. If you don't care about detail or accuracy, fine, you don't have to, but pretending that detail or scale fidelity is somehow made irrelevant by watching your train run by at long range is just self delusion. By the way, how can you uncouple cars from ten feet away? Nice " introductory post ", ab 1 rab ,...Did you just get here from the Atlas forum, or did you learn your nastiness the old-fashioned way ? I don't clearly see a half-inch target at 200 feet, or easily recognize a human face at 200 yards...I don't particularly think I'm myopic, but I know who I don't like...and you are the newest member of that exclusive club. Mike
QUOTE: Originally posted by ab1rab The ten foot rule idea is rot. IF your eyesight is still 20/20, you can count scale rivets from ten feet in 1/20.3. You can see every board on a boxcar. People talk about the ten foot rule, but they mean a myopic ten feet, or an eyes shut ten feet, or an I don't give a cuss ten feet. Ten feet scales out to 200 feet in reality. You can see a half inch target at 200 feet . You can see if your wife looks angry or unhappy at 200 feet. At 200 yards you can easily recognize a human face. If you don't care about detail or accuracy, fine, you don't have to, but pretending that detail or scale fidelity is somehow made irrelevant by watching your train run by at long range is just self delusion. By the way, how can you uncouple cars from ten feet away?
QUOTE: Originally posted by d4fal "A good sized, well aimed Rock will also do the same....[:D][:D][:D]" Right now, my baby is too precious for me to rough handle her like that in the previous post,
Have fun with your trains
QUOTE: Originally posted by vettbass robmik: I did want to add an answer to your question "How do you uncouple from 10 feet?" With a Steam loco, first you install RC. This involves the use of servos from the model airplane hobby, and requires two of them. One for the steam valve, (a little wheel that controls pressure induction and therefore speed), and one for the reversing lever. That little handle that resets the valve gear assembly to it's opposite eccentric which makes the loco run backwards. Just like the real thing. Then with a little practice, and a good "uncoupler" track section, you back the consist up to the uncoupler and halt the motion. The uncoupler trips the mechanism under your consist car and the cars to the rear of this are now detached. Reverse the lever again and be on your way. You can even practice further and get your loco to reverse wheel direction in mid-motion to initiate a "panic stop". You know, get a fast moving loco to come to a quick halt by throwing the reversing lever while still up in steam and watch the drivers spin backwards while the train rolls forward to a very fast halt. And you can do this from, 5, 10, 20, 30, 40 50 feet away. I love it.
Is it REAL? or Just 1:29 scale?
Long live Outdoor Model Railroading.
Rene Schweitzer
Classic Toy Trains/Garden Railways/Model Railroader
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