GREAT shot Jeffery!
jeffrey-wimberly wrote: This is what happens when you turn your back on McHenry couplers for a couple of minutes. I had stepped into the back room to get another loco off the display shelf. The train came around through the scene you see below. The last few cars came uncoupled. I came back into the room just in time to see the two locos (both powered Athearns) slam into the uncoupled cars. The impact broke the coupler on the front of the loco and one of the buildings got slightly uprooted as the cars slammed into it.
This is what happens when you turn your back on McHenry couplers for a couple of minutes. I had stepped into the back room to get another loco off the display shelf. The train came around through the scene you see below. The last few cars came uncoupled. I came back into the room just in time to see the two locos (both powered Athearns) slam into the uncoupled cars. The impact broke the coupler on the front of the loco and one of the buildings got slightly uprooted as the cars slammed into it.
PICKY-PICKY-PICKY!!!The "dead end siding" you reference is officially (AAR Standard) called a "Side Track"; sidings have two switches and connects to the mainline at both ends; side tracks have one switch and is of definite length; a spur track is, essentially, a side track of indefinite length.PICKY-PICKY-PICKY!!!
Nick,
When running backwards into a dead end siding what is the pass/fail standard when they are being tested this way. If only half derail do they all pass.
Now for my input. When I was about 8 years old I had my fathers Lionel 700E #5344 pulling about 10 scale cars on the dining room floors large oval of 072 Lionel scale track. My dad wasn't home and I was highballing just to see how fast she would go! I do not know how fast she will go, but I do know it will go fast enough to dump off and break the marker light from the front of the engine. I was sick and I just knew I was in for one of my dads "paddlings" (which was not a beating) and he was gonna be mad at me. When he finally came home after working overtime several hours on 3rd trick at C&Os Walbridge yard coal puller it was about 3:00am and I was still awake. I got out of bed and went down staris to confess. Much to my suprise he did not yell, paddle or do anything like that. He told me how disappointed he was that I had done that.
I learned two things, one: don't run the trains to fast, and more importantly two: don't yell at kids for being kids, especially if you ever want them to play with your trains again. My daughter, now 24 still remembers ruining a brass caboose, two fine scratchbuilt cars and a brass Colorado and Southern Consolidation about 1000' onto the basement floor as the dead end siding was right into the aisle where the duck under was. I smiled and told her accidents happen, adon't worry, I built them so I can fix them. I got her another train to run, an Athern F unit with a Hi-F drive. Oh well kids are more important than trains and I will admit it I am a train addict. Just telling this eppisode brings back great memories of family and trains. By the way I still have the NYC Hudson and the scale track and my HO equipment was mostly repaired and the engine still has a marker light bent at an odd angle. I do not run the Hudson to fast, and I will never repair the broken marker light. I have been playing with trains continously now for about 50 years.
Paul
Dayton and Mad River RR
Dr. Frankendiesel aka Scott Running BearSpace Mouse for president!15 year veteran fire fighterCollector of Apple //e'sRunning Bear EnterprisesHistory Channel Club life member.beatus homo qui invenit sapientiam
Mine is simpliest to explain with a photo:
Yes, the caboose is not touching the ground!
I was driving the Wisconsin and Southern Railroad train on my club's layout as we were displaying at the show. Since we are a loop display layout we run two trains on the same track sometimes. I had an ore train running ahead of me, and the engineer failed to notice that his train had last it's rear half. I come around a corner and see the caboose, but even though I slammed on the brakes it was too late. Unfortunately at the same time a little excursion train was passing on the outside main, and the slack running out of the ore cars caused cars at the opposite end to derail on the bridge, and they smashed into the passenger cars. Trust me, it was a mess.
Noah
Train #1aSouth The Virginian fast coal was traveling on the outer main near Newtown's Farm when the #6 car derailed on the Whicert Creek bridge. The car then got "stuck" on the bridge and proceeded to derail the rest of the train off track on the corner, spilling coal onto the inner main. Clean up took awhile!!!
P.S. I wish I would have taken a picture of this. Most poeple in here would have gotten a laugh because the corner were the coal was dumped....is 4.5ft from the front edge of the pike and no lift out, drop down or access other then the aisle. I've since done away with "live loads" until I build the new layout which won't have track more the 2ft from the aisle!!!!!!
I have had no serious accidents myself, but I heard a story about a guy, who was running his trains when the phone rang. He got up to answer it...opening the drop-leaf bridge on the way out. Yes, we all know where this is going. He came back just in time to see his 3 expensive brass locomotives hurtle off the edge. He managed to catch the last one, but the other 2 were ruined. So always, always, always, always--[5 minutes later]--always, always, always,--[10 minutes later]--always, always have an electrical lockout that cuts power to the approach tracks when it's open, if you're going to have a drop-leaf bridge.
P.S. Nice levitating boxcar, Jeremy!
Darth Santa Fe wrote: How did THAT happen!?
I can't explain! I scratched my head over it too. As I continue to look at the photo, it's just mind boggling. It looks like the coupler on the second boxcar got lodged in the trucks of the forward boxcar during impact. As I recall, nothing got broke either!
This wasn't as much of a derailment as it was an off layout freak accident. Last month I absolutely destroyed the handrails on my HO Guilford SD26.......I was removing the shell (after taking out the the coupler boxes) to install a decoder, and as I was pulling the chassis and shell in different directions, my butterfingers sent the shell flying to the floor, and the chassis still in my other hand. Let's just say I would have been happier if the mechanism had hit the floor, at least truck and fuel tank details are easier to repair than super thin plastic handrails
When I was a kid, one time a kid came over to my house who wanted to wreck trains, they were mine, I did not want them wrecked, wouldn't let him run *MY* trains that way.
So the most common wrecks on my layout are some wheel picking the leading points of a turnout, or running into some break away cars that didn't stay coupled. Luckily, as long as I'm watching, can catch it and stop in time unless in momentum mode.
Sometimes I fall asleep on the floor watching. Try not to though, Just in case.
I'm an N scaler, and I use stick pens to hold my track down because my layout has a one inch thick styrofoam base. Anyway, I was doing a little track work one day about a year ago, and by accident left one of the pens sticking up about a quarter of an inch. I already had two locos pulling about ten cars on the tracks waiting for me to get out of the way so they could run, and when I hit the juice, they made one full lap of the layout, hit the pen that was sticking up and all but three cars crashed off on the floor. I managed to repair everything, but it sure made me sick... I pay closer attention to what I'm doing now.
Tracklayer
Witnessed several horrible accidents at the last Manassas Railroad Festival. Towards the end of the day the wind started picking up. My daughters and I were checking out a Lego train display (it is amazing what is available now) when one whole corner lifted up in the wind. It threw about half the display on top of the other. Only the Christmas train part was spared. The laughable thing was the guy running it looked at us like somehow we caused it. Just glared at us.
The same wind gust also pushed a long coal unit train over on its side on a HO modular layout, just as the train crossed a high bridge. Everything after the locomotives was either on its side or down the ravine. About 40 cars. The owner looked like he wanted to cry.
QUOTE: Originally posted by mtrails I can't explain how this happened, you'll just have to look at the 3rd photo!
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