How come subways are powered by only one rail and electric toy trains are powered by two? If garden trains were powered by only one rail, track cleaning would be quicker and easier.
The Home of Articulated Ugliness
Greetings
Mainline UK systems are third rail plus overhead systems as Cabbage correctly states. However the Lon don underground system operates on a FOUR rail system.
Alan, Oliver & North Fork Railroad
https://www.buckfast.org.uk/
If you don't know where you are going, any road will take you there. Lewis Carroll English author & recreational mathematician (1832 - 1898)
The head is gray, hands don't work , back is weak, legs give out, eyes are gone, money go's and my wife still love's Me.
Modeling the Pennsylvania Railroad in N Scale.
www.prr-nscale.blogspot.com
Ray Dunakin wrote:When I saw the subject heading, I thought maybe you were interested in modeling a subway. Now there's an idea -- just stick a few miniature stairwells around the garden with signs indicating station names, and you're all set! No track cleaning, no expensive locos or rolling stock, no wiring or construction. Just tell everyone it's all underground! :)
MisterBeasley, over on the Model Railroader forums, has a subway that has surface features just like that. His stations can be seen at the table edges, but the best view is from the TV camera in the head end car of his subway train.
Speaking of third rails - the NYC subways have overrunning third rail, somewhat protected by a board over the top on the old IRT lines. The ex-New York Central third rail was underrunning - contact surface on the bottom, with the whole rail wrapped in insulation. The latter was less prone to hiccups, since things that would just lay on the top-running subway rails wouldn't stick very well to the underside of the underrunning rail.
Chuck (former New Yorker)
rpc7271 wrote:Subways use an overhead wire instead of the other rail. Outdoors this overhead system results in even more maintenance that a 2 rail system. Besides an underground garden railroad would be hard to see or enjoy but it would leave more room for plants.
Sounds like light rail that happens to run in a tunnel for part of its route. The only true (all-underground) subway with pantographs that I've ever seen was a newer line in Tokyo- and the "wire" was a small section T rail suspended from the tunnel roof (which, I admit, is a rather odd location for a third rail.)
Chuck (modeling Central Japan in September, 1964)
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