Dave Howarth Jr. Livin' On Former CNW Spur From Manitowoc To Appleton In Reedsville, WI
- Formerly From The Home of Wisconsin Central's 5,000,000th Carload
- Manitowoc Cranes, Manitowoc Ice Machines, Burger Boat
"No soup for you!" - Yev Kassem (from Seinfeld)
RJ
"Something hidden, Go and find it. Go and look behind the ranges, Something lost behind the ranges. Lost and waiting for you. Go." The Explorers - Rudyard Kipling
http://sweetwater-photography.com/
QUOTE: Originally posted by miniwyo Does UP use slugs??
QUOTE: Originally posted by ajmiller Today I saw NS 11G run up the hill at Altoona PA with 7 units lead by an SD40-2. The other units were a GP38-2, a pair of GP15-1's, a pair of high nose GP40's one of which was smoking heavily and a slug (it was number 912, listed as an RP-E4 on the roster I have). A pair of SD40-2's were also shoving on the back. George Neat posted a nice picture of 11G on Railpictures.net at http://www.railpictures.net/viewphoto.php?id=78315
QUOTE: Originally posted by Overmod Technically, there's no 'maximum speed' a road slug could reach that's different from the original locomotive it was converted from -- or from the slug mother it's attached to. There is no reason why the 'chassis' needs to be different when the engine is removed, long hood cut down, etc. On the other hand, a slug CAN limit the top speed of a train in a different sense -- there will be an upper limit to attainable speed dependent on the peak hp/kW produced by the engine, and even if the slug is completely cut out at that point, it still represents additional train resistance without contributing additional prime-mover power. But I think the former sense is what you meant.
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