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Matter of Opinion To Smoke or Not to Smoke

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Posted by Doughless on Saturday, November 11, 2017 12:42 PM

Reminds me of the old Get Smart schtick with Hymee (that was his name) the robot (played by Dick Gautier).  When at a party...

"Hymee, would you like a drink?"

Sorry, I only drink oil.

"Do you smoke?"

Only when I drink bad oil......

- Douglas

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Posted by BroadwayLion on Saturday, November 11, 2017 11:45 AM

If SUBWAY TRAIN make smoke is big problem. Will shut down huge sections of system and overwelm the rest of it.

More smoke more angst.

Even on layout of LION smoke is big problem. A resister fire damaged a subway car. Oh well, it still looks prototypical as a work car.

 

ROAR

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Posted by csxns on Saturday, November 11, 2017 9:13 AM

BRAKIE
liver

Add mush to that and i am in.

Russell

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Posted by BigDaddy on Friday, November 10, 2017 10:05 PM

ATLANTIC CENTRAL
Henry, in the real world, lots of complex acoustic factors determine what sound we hear and how far away we might hear them

I've been watching Youtube webcams.  One of the free demos went from a sleepy PA town of West Newton to Chicago.  Once in a while a car would drive down the street and less often a train in PA.  They moved the free video to Chicago and there was a constant roar of noice, 90 trains a day and the standing joke was there was a fire engine circling the layout.

It's said the sounds of Gettysburg could not be heard 10 miles away, but it could be heard in Pittsburgh.  Accoustic Shadow it's called and that wasn't the only battle that could be seen but not heard.

 

Henry

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Posted by ATLANTIC CENTRAL on Friday, November 10, 2017 8:53 PM

BigDaddy

I'm not sure what I thought of my American Flyer smoke in the 1950's but I think I liked it.  I was into trains in the 80's and then left the hobby, only to return a couple years ago.

I was surprised that the smell of smoking locos at a train show smells exactly like a remember.  After breathing way too many bad thing for my lungs, I am not a fan of the smell. Liver also tastes exactly like I remember, tho' I have no idea when I was fed liver.  It will not happen again it this lifetime.  Big Smile

Sound, I have decided I like it. 

From the factory, it is too loud and I am not heavy handed on bells and horns.  People write that you can't actually hear a real train several miles away.  I hunt deer in SC and the tracks are 3 or 4 miles away and I most certainly here the hum or drone of the diesel.  It is not the noise of wheels on track. 

 
 
 
 

Henry, in the real world, lots of complex acoustic factors determine what sound we hear and how far away we might hear them.

In the woods, on a calm day, with little other environmental sounds at play, I don't doubt you hear a diesel prime mover from 3-4 miles.

Yet driving on route 40 in northeast Maryland, parallel to the Northeast corridor tracks of AMTRAK/NS on one side, and the CSX tracks on the other, or standing trackside at the grade crossing in downtown Aberdeen MD, the sound of the locomotives quickly fade into the background of automobile traffic, industrial noise, human activity and quickly give way to the track noise as the loco gets further away while you are still near the tracks and the passing train.

Sometimes from 1/4 mile it is hard to hear the trains at all. Other times they seem loud. 

The point simply is real world is different from our layout rooms. Everyone responds to sounds differently.

But my interests in model trains have lead me in a direction that does not make sound a useful or enjoyable addition - others have different interests and goals.

My point is simply we should not assume others are interested in model trains for the same reasons or in the same ways as we are.

I like to build models, I like prototype operation, I like being the "dispatcher" or the "superintendent", or the "railroad president" more than being the "engineer".

So that "event" of following the train around the layout and listening to it is not a high priority for me.

The OP mentioned 5 locos from at least 4 different prototypes that operated in at least 4 different regions, and if he is having fun, that is great. 

But buying random models RTR and running them on the same layout together holds no long term interest for me. I've been at this for 46 years now. I am building a minature representation of a single place in time with function and continuity, even if that place in fictional, the point is for it to express realistic continuity and believability. So an I-5, and Challenger, and a NYC? Hudson, all in the same place?

Again, if you are having fun you are doing this hobby right, but it was the OP who was so amazed that anyone would not like sound and smoke.........

I'm not amazed that others do like sound and smoke......

Sheldon

    

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Posted by BRAKIE on Friday, November 10, 2017 6:03 PM

selector
My opinion, 'bout as valuable as a pair of soiled socks.

Soil socks is mighty nice if your feet and boots are wet..Been there several times in '70..

I agree with Kevin..If you and your son enjoys smoke and sound-enjoy!

I enjoy Sound for thirty to forty minutes then its F8 time to return the sound of silence.

Henry,I love a big plate of liver and onions.

Larry

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Posted by BigDaddy on Friday, November 10, 2017 6:01 PM

I'm not sure what I thought of my American Flyer smoke in the 1950's but I think I liked it.  I was into trains in the 80's and then left the hobby, only to return a couple years ago.

I was surprised that the smell of smoking locos at a train show smells exactly like a remember.  After breathing way too many bad thing for my lungs, I am not a fan of the smell. Liver also tastes exactly like I remember, tho' I have no idea when I was fed liver.  It will not happen again it this lifetime.  Big Smile

Sound, I have decided I like it. 

From the factory, it is too loud and I am not heavy handed on bells and horns.  People write that you can't actually hear a real train several miles away.  I hunt deer in SC and the tracks are 3 or 4 miles away and I most certainly here the hum or drone of the diesel.  It is not the noise of wheels on track. 

 
 
 

Henry

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Posted by ATLANTIC CENTRAL on Friday, November 10, 2017 5:43 PM

nscalebuilder

Wow you do have your reasons and thats fine for you. My reasons and my perception of realistic is a bit different than yours and thats fine for me.  When My 9 year old son hits that whistle, as she's comming out of the west tunnel blowing all the nasty Smoke and I See the smile on his face, That is really the only reason that matters to Me. Again Thank you for sharring all your opinions and reasons it's all Good.

 

And, I do feel I made it clear that I understand that others like these features, and that in fact, under different conditions from the current HO layout, I too would embrace sound. 

And my Grand Children love the trains around here just fine. 

I'm glad you and your son are having fun, the youngest of my six children is 32, my oldest grandchild is 15.

I worked in a hobby shop starting at age 14, and managed a train department at age 20, I fully understand the broadness of this hobby.

It was my father who started me into it way back in the 1960's - some of those items are still on my layout today......

Sheldon

    

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Posted by wobblinwheel on Friday, November 10, 2017 4:25 PM

I have about eight locos with sound. Only three have smoke, and they are BLI. All three of them look pretty realistic, as I've reprogrammed the smoke fans to "push" the smoke up from the stacks. Except immediately after adding fluid, they don't "billow" smoke out while sitting still, and it doesn't drift down and settle on the loco, either. At speed, the smoke is lifted high above the loco, due to the more rapid "chuffing" effect. Looks a lot like the "real thing". Any smoke unit can look just WRONG, if not programmed correctly, and when it is, it doesn't pour smoke out all over the place, either! Rarely see any residue on the tops of the engines...Also, I keep the sounds turned WAY down from default, usually about 10 to 15% of max. If you play them LOUD, it will surely get on your nerves quickly! Remember, all this stuff is PROGRAMMABLE...adjust the sound so it's comfortable, adjust the smoke so it looks good. Push a function key when you don't want smoke (or too far away to easily see), push a function key to reduce the sound if it becomes annoying...how accommodating can it get? I think many people get a bad impression of sounds and smoke, is because it ain't set-up right! If can even hear it at twenty feet away, it's TOO LOUD! And they almost always are.....

Mike C.

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Posted by SeeYou190 on Friday, November 10, 2017 3:14 PM

nscalebuilder
When My 9 year old son hits that whistle, as she's comming out of the west tunnel blowing all the nasty Smoke and I See the smile on his face, That is really the only reason that matters to Me.

.

That is a pretty good argument in favor of smoke and sound if you ask me.

.

-Kevin

.

Living the dream.

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Posted by nscalebuilder on Friday, November 10, 2017 3:08 PM

Wow you do have your reasons and thats fine for you. My reasons and my perception of realistic is a bit different than yours and thats fine for me.  When My 9 year old son hits that whistle, as she's comming out of the west tunnel blowing all the nasty Smoke and I See the smile on his face, That is really the only reason that matters to Me. Again Thank you for sharring all your opinions and reasons it's all Good.

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Posted by ATLANTIC CENTRAL on Friday, November 10, 2017 2:47 PM

nscalebuilder

If I may  I haven't seen any unwanted responces.  I am glad so many people have chimed in and of course I got the answer I was looking for eventualy. For my money MTH will be the point of Choice for me when I am spending 600-700 dollars for an Engine I want the best that I can get. I have been a fan of BLI since they opened there doors for Buisness, but now that a good smoking locomotive is there for the Buying untill they step up there game a little I will have to look to Maryland. BTW I reset all the CV's for the engine to try and obtain a good smoke affect it may be faulty, time will tell.    Thank All of you for your replies it has made for some good reading and I am a little shocked about how many people do not like sound in there trains. But to each his own!!

 

OK, a few more thoughts then. First I assume you are reffering to HO scale despite your screenname?

Second, this is a very broad hobby that means completley different things to different people, but on the topic of onboard sound, a few specific facts and thoughts:

In HO scale, if you the viewer are 3 actual feet from the model, you are 270 scale feet away - real trains are amazingly quiet at that distance due to the rapid dispersion of sounds outdoors - our train rooms are not outdoors, they are small indoor highly relective places that make the sound too loud too far away.

In fact, if you watch trains in real life, the noise of the locomotive is quickly replaced by the track noise once the loco is past you.

Next problem - Frequency range and dynamic range - as a successful HiFi speaker system designer I can tell you that poorly reproduced sound actually starts to annoy most people after extended listening - Two 1" speakers are never going to produce good sound.

Room accustics and chaos - ONE model locomotive, making reasonably good sound (like in a larger scale, O scale or larger) can be very interesting and fun. But, on a basement filling HO layout, with 4-8 operators, multiple trains running, guests talking, etc, it quickly turns into an annoying din - some people like chaos, not me.

So my layout fills a 25 x 40 room and supports the operation of 6-8 trains at once, most all pulled by multi unit diesel lashups or double headed steam - just imagine 24 of those things going at once.......there is no volume setting low enough to make that situation work.

So, if my modeling goals included running one train at a time in some sort of intimate relationship with that one train, I would model in a large scale and I would have sound.

BUT, since that is not my goal, sound is basically incompatible with a number of my other goals, which I was deticated to long before DCC and sound, and which I have no desire to abandon, so no sound for me.

Personally, to my HiFi trained ears, all these things sound like a 1968 9 transistor radio playing some AM station.

And, if you take a survey, you will find a measureable percentage of people who agree with all or some of the points above - we have had this conversation on this forum before.

If you like sound, by all means go for it, have fun.

As for smoke, the indoor environmential issues alone are enough to answer that one for me........remember, 6-8 trains running at once........

DISCLAIMER - I don't buy any $600-$700 locomotives from any brand - partly because I don't need/want DCC/sound or smoke, and partly because BLI and MTH make very few models that even fit the theme of my layout. Most of my steam power is Bachmann Spectrum and Proto2000 from the last 20 years or so.

I have over 140 locomotives (powered units), only only 7 are from BLI, and none have sound (anymore). I have no MTH locos, they will not run correctly on my pulse widith modulated DC throttles.

As commented above, the detail and executon of most MTH locos is a bit too toy like - simply compare up close the MTH Berkshire to either the Bachmann or the Proto2000 models and you will see how heavy and over scale many parts are, like the running boards, pilot, etc.

On average, my investment per loco is only about $120.......

And all are kit bashed or modified in some way........

Sheldon

PS - to be fair, my 140 locos have been purchased over the last 25 years or so, most came DC only, a few have had decoders removed. In today's market, each might represent $250-$300 to replace.

    

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Posted by nscalebuilder on Friday, November 10, 2017 2:33 PM

Sorry my first try and posting Pictures or video

 

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Posted by selector on Friday, November 10, 2017 2:29 PM

"Page not found"

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Posted by nscalebuilder on Friday, November 10, 2017 2:19 PM

My 9 year Old Nathan at the controls, MTH 2-8-2 PRR.

I will get it going here in a minute or so.

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Posted by BATMAN on Friday, November 10, 2017 1:59 PM

tstage

 

 
selector
My opinion, 'bout as valuable as a pair of soiled socks.

 

Yea...but I bet if you set them on fire, Crandell, they'd look pretty realistic. Cool

Tom

 

Ya but, how about that smell!?Pirate

Brent

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Posted by tstage on Friday, November 10, 2017 12:58 PM

nscalebuilder
For my money MTH will be the point of Choice for me when I am spending 600-700 dollars for an Engine I want the best that I can get...But to each his own!!

Truer words have never been spoken.  What's "best" for one person may not be what's best or a priority for another.  You have to choose what's important to you and base your purchases off of that.

Tom

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Posted by nscalebuilder on Friday, November 10, 2017 12:48 PM

If I may  I haven't seen any unwanted responces.  I am glad so many people have chimed in and of course I got the answer I was looking for eventualy. For my money MTH will be the point of Choice for me when I am spending 600-700 dollars for an Engine I want the best that I can get. I have been a fan of BLI since they opened there doors for Buisness, but now that a good smoking locomotive is there for the Buying untill they step up there game a little I will have to look to Maryland. BTW I reset all the CV's for the engine to try and obtain a good smoke affect it may be faulty, time will tell.    Thank All of you for your replies it has made for some good reading and I am a little shocked about how many people do not like sound in there trains. But to each his own!!

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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, November 10, 2017 11:58 AM

wobblinwheel
The fan is usually shut off at idle, so that litterally NO smoke comes out while sitting still.

That´s not far from reality. A steam engine not in motion hardly emits any smoke, unless the  blower is turned on. When a steam engine is just coasting, the amount of smoke coming out of the smoke stack is also quite small.

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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, November 10, 2017 11:53 AM

ATLANTIC CENTRAL
Maybe a different title would have limited the unwanted responses

I quite agree, Sheldon - that title is utterly misleading! Well, the OP stirred the pot and now has to live with the answers.

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Posted by wobblinwheel on Friday, November 10, 2017 11:51 AM

In my experience, the BLI smoke units are NOT properly set-up (programmed) from the factory! The fan is usually shut off at idle, so that litterally NO smoke comes out while sitting still. The fan only spins when the loco chuffs, which looks rather feeble. The fan-speed at idle can be programmed to turn at any speed you want, the chuff duration of the fan can be changed, if necessary, and the heating temperature can be increased, if necessary. Go online and download the Paragon 2 technical manual and look at CV's 234-238 (I think). These things can be made look pretty good! As long as there's nothing wrong, of course....

Mike C.

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Posted by tstage on Friday, November 10, 2017 11:19 AM

selector
My opinion, 'bout as valuable as a pair of soiled socks.

Yea...but I bet if you set them on fire, Crandell, they'd look pretty realistic. Cool

Tom

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Posted by selector on Friday, November 10, 2017 11:09 AM

I shut off my smoke using the slide switch under my BLI steamers, of which I have maybe 17, as Job One.  It doesn't look realistic. Neither does real water.  It flows about eight times as fast as it should in scale, or ripples the same way if it isn't flowing and has that glassy smooth surface.

Even though I am a fan of BLI steamers, their smoke units can't hold a smoking candle up to the MTH units.  That's where the comparison ends, because I feel BLI's steamers beat MTH's in realism hands down in most cases.  Not in quality...they're quite comparable, but the MTH units are intended to be a bit more toylike. 

My opinion, 'bout as valuable as a pair of soiled socks.

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Posted by ATLANTIC CENTRAL on Friday, November 10, 2017 11:01 AM

nscalebuilder

Very Nice. I was not try to get an opinion of who likes sound or even smoke what I was asking is those who do run thses units that do have that option  do you think the Bli's fan driven units are better than the units that MTH uses. From my experience so Far the MTHunits out smoke the BLI's hands down and my Challenger and My light Mike produce a very convincing smoke a very long way from the old Seuthe Generators. Since I just bought my First BLI with smoke I really have nothing to compare as to the difference in the two. There will always be those who do and those who do not with everything are own taste is what makes the Hobby what it is to me to you and everyone who enjoys watching that Train round the bend!!

 

Maybe a different title would have limited the unwanted responses, but you moved it up a notch with your own response of surprise that not everyone likes sound and smoke......

Sheldon

    

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Posted by MisterBeasley on Friday, November 10, 2017 10:18 AM

I like the visual effect of the smoke, but the smell of it drives me away.  I was at the Springield show a few years ago and I felt sorry for the vendors whose tables were next to the big MTH display with all its smoking engines.

The smoke particles will also settle on your layout and will require more attention to track cleaning.

No thanks.

It takes an iron man to play with a toy iron horse. 

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Posted by tstage on Friday, November 10, 2017 9:53 AM

nscalebuilder
Ok The Question for those of you who have Both MTH and BLI whats your favorite Smoker.

My favorite?  The one that doesn't smoke. Stick out tongue

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Posted by nscalebuilder on Friday, November 10, 2017 9:45 AM

Very Nice. I was not try to get an opinion of who likes sound or even smoke what I was asking is those who do run thses units that do have that option  do you think the Bli's fan driven units are better than the units that MTH uses. From my experience so Far the MTHunits out smoke the BLI's hands down and my Challenger and My light Mike produce a very convincing smoke a very long way from the old Seuthe Generators. Since I just bought my First BLI with smoke I really have nothing to compare as to the difference in the two. There will always be those who do and those who do not with everything are own taste is what makes the Hobby what it is to me to you and everyone who enjoys watching that Train round the bend!!

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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, November 10, 2017 9:06 AM

Bringing the thread back to the OP´s question, which was about smoke and not sound - this issue has been discussed a number of times in recent years. There seem to be more folks not in favor than there are liking it. In HO scales and even more in N scale, the smoke is, IMHO, far from even being a mile from what would look prototypical, especially with th old Seuthe-style smoke units, which evaporate tiny drops of a paraffine-based smoke fluid to resemble a puffing loco. Things look different when you move up in scale to the 1/32 or gauge one scale. Watch this:

I don´t think you could get any closer to the real thing, if the smoke would come out black from the stack and white from the cylinder valves and the whistle!

As good as it already looks, I don´t think I could stay longern than 60 seconds in a smoke filled basement!

 

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Posted by ATLANTIC CENTRAL on Friday, November 10, 2017 9:05 AM

nscalebuilder

Wow Kevin, your the first person I ever talked with that did not prefer Sound to non sound. But to each his own, Thanks for the reply..

 

Not to get way off topic, or start controversy, but in a great many discussions on this forum over the last several years, a fairly large percentage have expressed a lack of interest in sound or smoke.

Those who vote "no" or "indifferent" regarding sound are easily 30% or more.

Remember, only about 50% are even using DCC.

Conversations about smoke are generally over 50% against.

Still DC, quiet, and smoke free in my world.........

Maybe what you are missing is that many people are not going to limit their locomotive choices based on what MTH and BLI offer..........

Sheldon

    

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