QUOTE: Lucky thing for the British "establishment" that they were able to shun American technology vs. having to *embrace* the technology of the Third Reich
QUOTE: Originally posted by owlsroost QUOTE: Lucky thing for the British "establishment" that they were able to shun American technology vs. having to *embrace* the technology of the Third Reich Just for a bit of history, the contributions that German engineers have made to modern transportation are huge. Nicolaus Otto invented the first practical four-stroke internal combustion engine in 1876. Gottlieb Daimler took Otto's engine, developed it further, and put it into a carriage to create the world's first 4-wheeled automobile in 1885. Rudolf Diesel developed the compression ignition engine which bears his name during the 1890's. Opposed-piston two-stroke diesel engines were developed by Junkers in the late 1920's for airship/aircraft use (Napier were a pre-war licensee of this technology, which was later used in the 'Deltic' engines). The Britain and Germany both developed aircraft/missile jet engines during WWII (the German V1 was the world's first cruise missile, powered by a 'pulse jet' engine). The V2 missile was the grandfather of modern rockets, and Wernher von Braun and his team who developed it moved to the US after the war - and he effectively became the 'father' of the US space program. Modern AC drive technology for railway use was developed in Germany (the DB class 120 locomotives in 1979 were the world's first 'modern' AC drive electric locomotives). The AC drive technology used by EMD comes from Siemens in Germany. Tony
Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.
QUOTE: Not meant to pick on German engineering
QUOTE: Originally posted by cogload Railroading Brit - you dont reside in the "county town" of Radnorshire -i.e. New Radnor do you? I may actually know who you are..............(not stalking.....honest)!!! ;-). Murphy - mate you could fit the UK into one of the American states and think Texas is about 5 times the size of this island so we are a bit more condensed to say the least! Still, its nice to see our friends across the water take an interest in what goes on here - dont be scared to take a trip over...... Entertaining day at work - one train failure; one barrier failure; the pway ranting on...at least I didn't have the down sleepers in the station for a couple after a passenger died......oh.............. Varied preservation - the West Somerset Rules!
Isambard
Grizzly Northern history, Tales from the Grizzly and news on line at isambard5935.blogspot.com
QUOTE: Originally posted by Isambard QUOTE: Originally posted by cogload Railroading Brit - you dont reside in the "county town" of Radnorshire -i.e. New Radnor do you? I may actually know who you are..............(not stalking.....honest)!!! ;-). Murphy - mate you could fit the UK into one of the American states and think Texas is about 5 times the size of this island so we are a bit more condensed to say the least! Still, its nice to see our friends across the water take an interest in what goes on here - dont be scared to take a trip over...... Entertaining day at work - one train failure; one barrier failure; the pway ranting on...at least I didn't have the down sleepers in the station for a couple after a passenger died......oh.............. Varied preservation - the West Somerset Rules! "at least I didn't have the down sleepers in the station for a couple after a passenger died......" Translation please? [:)]
James, Brisbane Australia
Modelling AT&SF in the 90s
QUOTE: Originally posted by cogload Railroading Brit - you dont reside in the "county town" of Radnorshire -i.e. New Radnor do you? I may actually know who you are..............(not stalking.....honest)!!! ;-).
QUOTE: Originally posted by Isambard I'm surprised that sleeper trains are still run in the UK. What is the schedule for London Penzance? Great Western presumably? How about other overnights out of London? [:)]
QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding Neat! I'll have to try and find that on terraserver. Liskeard is the name of the town? I take it that's in England,not Scotland? Thanks
QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding While I'm fairly certain there are no horseshoe curves or loops in Britain, (?) I'm guessing that the grades are pretty flat. Trains with one freight engine don't strike me as hill climbers. What are some of the steeper grades still in use? Thanks
QUOTE: [i] But the people are a tad inbread though (the kid from Deliverance could easily be Cornish).
QUOTE: Originally posted by Isambard QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding Neat! I'll have to try and find that on terraserver. Liskeard is the name of the town? I take it that's in England,not Scotland? Thanks Murphy: If you find it please post the link. It sounds like an interesting layout possibility! [:)] Here's a good link for UK maps: http://www.multimap.com/map/home.cgi?client=public&lang=&advanced=&db=GB
QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding QUOTE: Originally posted by Isambard QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding Neat! I'll have to try and find that on terraserver. Liskeard is the name of the town? I take it that's in England,not Scotland? Thanks Murphy: If you find it please post the link. It sounds like an interesting layout possibility! [:)] Here's a good link for UK maps: http://www.multimap.com/map/home.cgi?client=public&lang=&advanced=&db=GB I'm searching.[:)] I'm not smart enough to post a link, but if I find it, maybe I can get nanaimo73 to link it for me.[:)]
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