The Dixie D Short Line "Lux Lucet In Tenebris Nihil Igitur Mors Est Ad Nos 2001"
QUOTE: Originally posted by iandor Yes men you are making sense; the coupling is unique to do with having a powered tender. The loco has what looks like a tongue type of hook that is a right angle pointing down. The tender has an arced slot going from one side to the other. The tongue rotates on the back of the loco as it goes round bends and the down part of the tomgue slides fron one side of the slot to the other as it goes around corners. I am not sure if the delay switch mentioned works while it is part of an MTS set up. However by really freeing up the tongue or swinging arm it has helped a lot. I hope Troy is reading this or someone familiar with MTS as I think it may be an MTS problem as well. As standard on MTS, when you first get one of these tenders you must match up the speed of the tender with the speed of the loco by running them separately and they should maintain the distance between them. Which i did do, I am not sure what speed i run them at but they were near perfect. However i now have a policy of running them at speed 8 on MTS, and at speed 8 I have suddenly forund that the tender is catching up to the loco steadily. I think that this being the case the tender may well pu***he Stainz off the track when going down hill on a bend. How does this sound to you guys. Rgds Ian
Tom Trigg
QUOTE: Originally posted by ttrigg Sure sounds like a "push/pull" problem to me. Have you ran this configuration at slower/faster speeds for an extended length of time to see if the problem disappears. I have NEVER had any luck running two powered units on any scale. I spent several thousand dollars (US) trying to do just that in N scale one year. I have vowed that I'll never again attempt that feat. If you should find the solution, please share the results. If you are successful, it just might provoke me into trying again.
QUOTE: Originally posted by ttrigg I understand the physics of the problem, what I encountered was that the two units never did share the same power/speed graph slope. For Example: at a power setting of three unit 1 ran at 50 feet per minute, unit 2 rant at 49.5 feet per minute. However at power setting 4 their speeds reversed, unit 1 at 60 feet per minute and unit 2 at 62 feet per minute. Then at power setting 5 unit 1 would do 70 fpm and unit 2 would do 65 fpm. I never could get a uniform speed/power graph going. Thus as I ran through the spectrum of power range, I would get the "push me/pull me" fight going and it always happened when the trains would run along the edge of the layout with the floor five feet below!!!!!!!!!! Lost more units than I care to count like that!
QUOTE: Originally posted by piercedan I have track power and run 2 engines all the time. I have 2 MTS porters paired, 2 sd-45's and 2 LGB cow engines, plus 2 sets of LGB engine/tender combinations. These do not give me any problems and run for hours on my RR. The key here is the units that are matched have power cables between them and the speeds are almost identical at slow, medium and fast running.
QUOTE: Originally posted by iandor HJ what affect do you think back EMF would have on this problem? I am having a time soon when i will be doing some MTS (Multi Train System) programming and i think if I crank the Stainz up a bit or drop the tender back this should help a bit, what does everyone think? Please advise. Rgds Ian
Get the Garden Railways newsletter delivered to your inbox twice a month