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QUOTE: Originally posted by CHIPSTRAINS AFTER READING EVERYONES EXPLANATION OF MU'ING, I HAVE A HEADACHE AND AM GOING TO LAY DOWN. WHEN I GET UP AND GOING AGAIN, I WILL PROBABLY ACCEPT THE SWITCH ON THE BACK WALL EXPLANATION. AM I RIGHT?? C'MON GUYS, DISPENSE WITH ALL THE TECHNICAL MUMBO-JUMBO, WE'RE RAILFANS, NOT ELECTRICAL-ENGINERING STUDENTS. "CHIP"
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QUOTE: Originally posted by BigDarrin I have a sort of related, but newbie question. Is there a particular reason for alternating the direction that the locos are facing? I've seen various combinations and wondered if it made just as much sense to have all facing the same direction as it does to have them front back front back. Back to your regularly scheduled program....
It's important to know that this thread seems to only talk about diesel electric to diesel electric, using the 27 pin multiple unit connectors. There are other forms of MU such as steam locomotive with diesel electric locomotive assist, and commuter transit electric rail cars with 100 pin train lines...
Steam to diesel control has existed only since the fantrip era began, probably with Clinchfield 1. It is basically the addition of a diesel locomotive throttle or hostler control next to the steam locomotive throttle. It is not so much MU as remote control of the diesel.
Former Car MaintainerIt's important to know that this thread seems to only talk about diesel electric to diesel electric, using the 27 pin multiple unit connectors. There are other forms of MU such as steam locomotive with diesel electric locomotive assist, and commuter transit electric rail cars with 100 pin train lines...
While proper ATS requires only centering the valve gear and optionally closing the throttle or interrupting the flow of steam to the valves, the introduction of ATC and running speed control requires most of what's needed to work an engine remotely; inherent in the automatic cutoff controls demonstrated by 1922 was the ability to adjust a power reverse proportional to back pressure, and even with 1920s technology it would not be difficult to make a proportional system that could appropriately 'repeater' the head-end throttle and reverse correctly for different types of trailing engine(s), including proper indicators for the firemen in the consist.
Control of trailing diesels is much more complicated if they use the notch system (which is digital control of engine speed and loading and only peripherally relates to steam-locomotive control. To my knowledge only one system lends itself to easy proportional 8-notch control: Franklin type D (which makes ingenious use of wiredrawing for control of an engine with rotary cam poppet valves).
There have been a number of more or less complicated ways to MU trailing steam with diesels over the years, including on several designs of steam-turbine-electric where the effects of load regulation can be precisely repeatered in a setup with continuous throttle (like the Baldwin air throttle). Getting a proportional load-regulator signal (or, more properly, deriving and then correcting one) poses an interesting technical exercise 'over the years' as technology robust enough to survive in a railroad environment has changed.
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