BigJim wrote:you know as well as i do that the carriers want you to learn how to strech break too..Do I? Well I would hope that there is someone, somewhere in the system that knows what they are doing, however, it doesn't seem to trickle down in a heavy enough stream. It's amazing how brainwashed some of these low level officials turn out to be.
you know as well as i do that the carriers want you to learn how to strech break too..
csx engineer
http://ge.ecomagination.com/site/showcase/erie.html
Now the rules have changed?
RailfanRailroader wrote: It's even better when the manager is behind you sweating about the red signal and you smile as you lay it down one car length from the insulated joints.
And you have a bridge to sell us as well?
transitrapid wrote: http://ge.ecomagination.com/site/showcase/erie.html Now the rules have changed?
Interesting that the track that the new locomotive is shown running on has catenary overhead.
RailfanRailroader wrote: It's even better when the manager is behind you sweating about the red signal and you smile as you lay it down one car length from the insulated joints. zardoz wrote:And you have a bridge to sell us as well?
zardoz wrote:And you have a bridge to sell us as well?
.
zardoz wrote: transitrapid wrote: http://ge.ecomagination.com/site/showcase/erie.html Now the rules have changed?Interesting that the track that the new locomotive is shown running on has catenary overhead.
Never too old to have a happy childhood!
So whats going on when I see a train back up to move forward out of a Intermodal yard?
Is the train using the springs of the couplers to back up and "spring the train forward?
I got the weirdest train yesterday morning, a loaded grain train with a single unit on the head end and two DP's! It had 100 cars, 14,000 tons. It took a little getting used too, but my MOP said UP is trying to stop break in two's. This goes against everything they have been preaching about "no air" because with this configuration you have no real dynamics on the headend, so you have to use air to slow the thing really down, but it sure is fun starting up a steep grade in notch 2 on the head end and notch 5-6 on the rear!
We'll see if the experiment continues.
zapp wrote: I got the weirdest train yesterday morning,................ We'll see if the experiment continues.
I got the weirdest train yesterday morning,................
Don't get too excited, the reason for the "no break train" is to run the trains ran from space.
daveklepper wrote:Were the DP's approximately 50 cars back or about 33 cars back?
they were the rear two! All the way on the rear of a 100 car train!
transitrapid wrote:No its when a Stack Train is about to pull out of the yard,,,Each couple has a cushion spring and it seems that the train is using the combined pushing power of 200 of those springs to push the train forward kinda of like those toy cars that you pull and push forward
What your thinking is wrong, there not using the drawbars to "spring" forward. If they have enough horse power (a mainline train not a switch engine) to move the train which ever way its left for them, bunched or streched, they shouldnt be getting slack to yank the train out. What ever there doing (or did) they shouldnt be moving like that.
Dynamic brakes dont work as well at speeds above about 35 or 40-ish with any kind of train, its even worse on a grade.
Yep....Now that i've read part of my own post again, the part thats in bold, i ment, with a real train.... one with some tonnage. All thats all true tho buddy.
Working with younger, cut back engineers, had more then one freak out on a big double stack with me as i passed a flasher at 70 (or more), looking to hit some 40mph cross overs up ahead. Passing that first mile seems like she's not gonna sit down. Last time my heater didnt work, i couldnt even see out my window... "air is what slows this thing down."
Our community is FREE to join. To participate you must either login or register for an account.