The GE floating bolster truck is nobody's kidneys friend. The Conrail B40-8s were 287,000#, so I imagine the W's were even heavier.
Actually, the somewhat lighter B36-7s rode worse than the B40s at speed due to their shorter length.
-Don (Random stuff, mostly about trains - what else? http://blerfblog.blogspot.com/)
The AAR type B is a swinghanger truck with stiff primaries and soft secondaries ala the EMD swinghanger truck. It SHOULD ride better than the FB. I never did a head to head ride test of the two, though.
I guess I think I know how a pedestal journal guided, drop equalizer, swing hanger truck works. I think I sorta know how the Pioneer-III style Amfleet truck works -- Don Oltmann explained it is merely a rubber sandwich for the primary springs and those big air springs, allowing some side motion and tied against fore-aft motion with those carbody struts.
How does an FB (floating bolster) truck work? Is it anything like the Amfleet truck? And what is a Flexicoil, and how does that one work?
If GM "killed the electric car", what am I doing standing next to an EV-1, a half a block from the WSOR tracks?
Paul, if you go look through some of the other thread from around the time I made this one, a poster by the name bogie engineer (hmm, something tells me he knows things) explained some of the differences in these trucks.
Paul Milenkovic wrote:I guess I think I know how a pedestal journal guided, drop equalizer, swing hanger truck works. I think I sorta know how the Pioneer-III style Amfleet truck works -- Don Oltmann explained it is merely a rubber sandwich for the primary springs and those big air springs, allowing some side motion and tied against fore-aft motion with those carbody struts.How does an FB (floating bolster) truck work? Is it anything like the Amfleet truck? And what is a Flexicoil, and how does that one work?
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