http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X-9dPuFf8XU
Japanese steam used the same Westinghouse cross-compressors as shown in the photo above. The also had a massive single-cylinder water pump that had a drawn-out shhhh-THUMP sound when operating. The turbogenerators were well-maintained and almost silent.
I recall being in the Haijima station in the '60s. There was a C58 class 2-6-2 standing alone, almost dead silent, waiting for a catenary motor to arrive with its train. Then the safeties lifted...
I have been to Niagara Falls, and I'll state that the steam escaping through those brass inverted trumpets was louder than half the water that rains on the North American continent falling off a cliff...
Chuck
switch7frg GP-9MAN11786; if that was a cool sound, wait untill you are standing beside the beast looking intently at the pipes and wondering what they are for and then the safety valve pops off ~~~ hoo hoo cheap thrill.
GP-9MAN11786; if that was a cool sound, wait untill you are standing beside the beast looking intently at the pipes and wondering what they are for and then the safety valve pops off ~~~ hoo hoo cheap thrill.
Johnny
If it was a double "thoom-click, thoom-click', or a muffled thump followed by a metallic sound, it was definitely the pumps. However, in many cases, the pumps are surprisingly quiet except for their exhaust which sounds like a rhythmic panting sound. The Pennsy K4's were like that...pant-pant, pant-pant...
Sounds like the air compressor. Depending on how the exhaust is plumbed, you may have also heard a soft exhaust "chuff" at the same time.
How often the air compressor cycles is dependent on how well the train holds air. Odds are if you were in earshot when the brakes were released, and thus recharging, you'd have heard it working much harder.
Larry Resident Microferroequinologist (at least at my house) Everyone goes home; Safety begins with you My Opinion. Standard Disclaimers Apply. No Expiration Date Come ride the rails with me! There's one thing about humility - the moment you think you've got it, you've lost it...
Y6bs evergreen in my mind
You may have been listening to the steam-driven air compressor. Here's one example:
Image linked from:
http://www.billcaid.com/2010/HogHunting20100323/Part29/Part29.html
This summer, my wife and I rode the Durango & Silverton. Upon arrival at Silverton, we went to take a picture of the locomotive, a K-36 2-8-2. I noticed the locomotive making a kind of drumbeat sound at regular intervals. It went in kind of 1-2-3-4--pause--1-2-3-4 beat. Does anybody know what this sound was?
Modeling the Pennsylvania Railroad in N Scale.
www.prr-nscale.blogspot.com
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