I run my mid 60s layout, kind of an ISL as if any trains entering it were assembled a little farther up the line. So, I can run solid tank trains, wood chip hoppers, gravel trains, etc, to their respective industries as unit trains. I just like how they look, and it makes running the layout easy.
Plus a mixed freight now and then with individual odd cars to spot at spurs.
Maybe you could work that idea into your op scheme. Or just run it like you want to because you like it that way. Dan
SeeYou190 If you can find them, the Proto-Power West chassis that were just Athearn F7 chassis fitted with a can motor and thrust washers installed, run amazingly well. . If you can find one with the "Micro-Motor" (it is actually a huge motor) option, it will pull the roof off of your house, but it is noisier. . I have used these in a couple of special projects. . -Kevin .
If you can find them, the Proto-Power West chassis that were just Athearn F7 chassis fitted with a can motor and thrust washers installed, run amazingly well.
.
If you can find one with the "Micro-Motor" (it is actually a huge motor) option, it will pull the roof off of your house, but it is noisier.
I have used these in a couple of special projects.
-Kevin
Living the dream.
I though it would be nice to run a train of solid tank cars. I have quite a few tank car models, mostly Athearn blue box. I started out with a ABA set of F units, again Athearn blue box. Added one tank car after another and gave the train a spin around the mainline after adding each tank car; just to make sure the tank car would stay coupled, and on the track. Dunno why I pulled out the diesels. The only time the railroads ran solid trains of tank cars was during WWII when the U-boats were sinking tankers up and down the east coast. For WWII of course the power should have been steam. Shipping crude oil by rail stopped after they finished the "Big Inch" pipeline from the Texas oil fields to the Pennsylvania refineries.
While I was doing that, I looked at my newly installed ammeter and noticed that the Athearns were pulling better than one amp, pegging out the ammeter which I had shunted for 1 amp full scale. Did not seem to bother my Tech II 1400 Railpower pack. This was the first of my locomotives to pull that kind of juice. Everything else I own was down in the 1/2 amp or less dept. I guess the Athearns are older than I thought they were. Which leads to yet another project, remotoring the F units. I am open to suggestions for motors that might fit nicely. The existing motors are can motors, so I cannot do the supermagnet trick on them.
Anyhow, I came up with 14 tank cars that run and stay on the track, and 7 that need work, mostly Kadee couplers. I also like to add Hazmat posters and paint the trucks with red auto primer.
David Starr www.newsnorthwoods.blogspot.com