QUOTE: Originally posted by Railroading_Brit the guard would be expected to keep the train stretched using the brakes on his van to avoid snatching.
Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding QUOTE: Originally posted by Railroading_Brit the guard would be expected to keep the train stretched using the brakes on his van to avoid snatching. Snatching? What would we call that? Thanks .
QUOTE: Originally posted by jchnhtfd Also, in the US, the slack action is much more in the draft gears than in the couplers -- the couplers should have very little slack (they have to have some), but the draft gears may have anything from several inches to several feet, depending on the gear.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Hugh Jampton The old cushion cars had long travel draft gear.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding QUOTE: Originally posted by Hugh Jampton The old cushion cars had long travel draft gear. OK What's a cushion car? Thanks
QUOTE: Originally posted by Hugh Jampton Not necessarily, a second rate engineer could probably get a train going along like a slinky, but the hydraulic cushioning provides what dynamicists refer to as a heavily damped response where motion in the draft gear is stopped. The extra travel in the draft gear reduces the likelyhood of it "bottoming out" which is when the actual shock occurs. The springs in the gear are also non linear, where they get stiffer as they are compressed which also helps to reduce the motion.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Murphy Siding Something came up on another thread that made me wonder....as it always does. British steam locomotives were built with inside cylinders because of -why?
John Baker
QUOTE: Originally posted by CSSHEGEWISCH At the risk of opening up a can of worms, what exactly was OVS Bulleid's chain-driven valve gear, and how successful (or not) was it?
QUOTE: Originally posted by Townsend There is a picture of Bulleid Chain drive in "British Pacific Locomotives" by C.J. Allen, a very good book but very English. There must be a picture of it on the web somewhere as it is a very difficult gear to describe, but if you see a diagram of it all becomes clear. It cannot have been all bad as BR did not bother rebuilding all the Bulleid pacifics and the unrebuilt ones lasted to the end of steam and several unrebuilt ones still run with the gear.
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