Last night I found where there is a flange greaser on the railroad line near my house. The track is nearly level, it's on a slight curve, several miles away from any hills. It skirts the edge of a residential area. Why a flange greaser there? Is that to make the train quieter through town?
Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.
A flange lubricator will be used to carry light grease (doesn't take much) a couple of miles in each direction, carried by the wheels, to extend life of the rail and reduce low speed crabbing.
Noise reducer? - Probably not. Friction modifier: certainly.
(Same logic has grease applicators on certain locomotives - IF the mechanical forces bother to keep the reservoir full and maintain the thing.) Not uncommon for hi-rail trucks to have applicators on them as well.
Safe to say that there's probably flange greasers up and down the line? Typically, how close are they to each other? What's crabbing? Is that what the railroad worker hears when he tracks some of that grease into the house?
Murphy Siding What's crabbing? Is that what the railroad worker hears when he tracks some of that grease into the house?
What's crabbing? Is that what the railroad worker hears when he tracks some of that grease into the house?
She who has no signature! cinscocom-tmw
"Crabbing" is the wheels trying to climb in a tight curve and continually attacking the rail and then falling off (especially with locomotives or any railcar with badly lubricated truck centerplates or kingpins)
Murphy Siding Is that what the railroad worker hears when he tracks some of that grease into the house?
Is that what the railroad worker hears when he tracks some of that grease into the house?
Is there a "how to model a flange greaser" in Model Raliroader?
Go ask that bunch...This is the 1:1 real world experience here......
CandOforprogress2Is there a "how to model a flange greaser" in Model Raliroader?
- Paul North.
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