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Since our rail industry thrives and I see O scale engines doubleheaded, all the time it works. I do it in n scale, for fun, not pulling power but I can't get my head around the mechanics.

 

I'm at the point on my Christmas layout, where the MTH Premier Berk can't pull everything I want to put behind it. 17 cars, but some are a bit heavy. A water tender, Coal cars, with a layer of real coal, multiple powered cars and the real killers some old heavy Kline Flat cars, that don't roll very well. At 17 cars, I'm good. If I add the Kline with Santa's sleigh, it surges to pull. Now the MTH  RailKing 2-8-0 is pulling 20, but they are free rolling, light cars.

 

I don't expect more from it. I have cleaned the loco and changed the traction tires. I am going to put it in for service after the season. It cost more that my snow blower, I can pay for the occasional tuneup . I will play with the less expensive stuff.

 

So that leads me to double heading. When I finish the PS2 upgrade on my GG1, I will have more DCS locos, than tracks, so.... Gotta add it and this will mean more pulling power.

 

So 2 questions. 1 practical, 1 theoretical

 

Theoretical

Why does it work? I understand that if 2 people grab the same rope, they can pull more. but if I hold the rope in one hand, and you pull my other hand (which is how I picture double heading- couplers act as hands, not a common rope) how does that help? Why isn't the last loco doing all the work? Why isn't it's motor, the limiting factor?

 

Practical - it's a 2 parter

 

1) If I put the GG1 behind the Berk, do I need to lose the water tender? If they are perfectly speed matched (As DCS should be). I'd think I'm fine.

 

2) Since I went with the best tach tape in the kit, the GG1 should match well. But, if it doesn't, won't it be the same as you pulling my hand? Either you will be tearing me in half, or I will be pushing you, in addition to pulling the train.

 

 

 

Original Post

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Originally Posted by pennsydave:

Hopefully you selected the proper tach tape for the size of the flywheel on the motor.  Using the wrong tape will not help with pulling power.  It is not a matter of the 'best' tape but the proper one.  

 

Pennsydave. Sorry, poor word choice. I meant prettiest, but should have written, the closest tape to the measurement. It was a while back, and I don't remember the specific diameter, but I don't think it was a perfect match.

Originally Posted by AMCDave:

Thanks for not using the 'L' word!!!!

AMCDave

I beg your pardon. Some of my closest friends run Lionel trains and I will use the word proudly. Why, if I had a friend name Lionel, I'd buy him a Lionel train. I even have Lionel trains. Or did you mean *ash-up? I can't use that word. It gets censored.

Last edited by Marty R

Did you lube the cars?  The prewar and post war cars need to be lubed to roll easily.  I have a 2353 which will pull more cars than will stay on O-31 track.  It will pull more than 20 cars, a mix of post war and MPC cars.

 

Your analogy of you pulling the rope with one hand while another person grabs your other hand to help pull is a good analogy of double heading.  The other person's force that he applies to your hand is transmitted directly through your body to the rope.  If you stop pulling, the other guy's pull will be transmitted to the rope.  Suppose you were on ice, and the other guy was off the ice on dry pavement.  Do you think he could pull you off the ice along with whatever load you were pulling?

Originally Posted by Bob Severin:

Am I missing the point, or, has NO ONE actually addressed Marty's original question?  I don't know the answer, does anyone?

OK.....why does multiple locomotives work??? Horsepower.

Think of it this way. You have a house trailer that weighs 3000 pounds. You might move it with a Honda Civic....but not far or long.

Same trailer with a diesel powered heavy duty pick-up. No problem because of the HP and torque the motor provides. 

Two locomotives coupled pull as  one...or like having a bigger engine.

If the two engines are matched correctly for power then double heading should be no problem.

 

I had to add a set of motors to my Williams F-7 ABA set to pull the six car passenger set at a speed above snail pace. After adding the extra motors I needed to add two more passenger cars to slow the engines down just a little.

 

Sometimes double heading engines is a hit & miss deal. Do some work and see what matches up well. Most MTH engines with PS-2 should run decently when double headed. Two TMCC engines should work together as well.

 

Problems usually happen when you mix & match different brands of engines, just like in the real world of trains.

 

Lee Fritz

Originally Posted by Marty R:

Why does it work? I understand that if 2 people grab the same rope, they can pull more. but if I hold the rope in one hand, and you pull my other hand (which is how I picture double heading- couplers act as hands, not a common rope) how does that help? Why isn't the last loco doing all the work? Why isn't it's motor, the limiting factor?

 

 

 

Ah, vectors!

 

Using your example, first person pulls on rope with 50 lbs of force. Second, person pulls on first person with 40 lbs. As long as both keep pulling (and the first person keeps all body parts intact and attached firmly to the rope), the rope has 50 lbs plus 40 lbs = 90 lbs exerted on it.

 

Same as if you stand in a convertible doing 50 mph and throw a baseball forward at 40 mph, someone on the ground trying to catch it sees a 90 mph baseball coming toward him.

 

Jim

 

I have doubleheaded my Lionel Milwaukee Road S-3s and I did it the real way. i.e. two seperate engines, two seperate TMCC controls. You get a better feel for having two locomotive engineers at their respective throttles of their locomotives. When you start out you can actually have out-of-beat exhausts until you get them in sinc, just like a couple of hoggers doubleheading. Imagine how much fun it would be to put in a third engine in mid-train or as a rear helper with a third tmcc. Think about it. To heck with diesels.

It is very difficult to get a pusher engine to help from the rear on model trains.  They either push the cars off the track to the outside of a curve, or stringline them off the track to the inside of a curve.  I watched the try to get it right for a half hour on Tony Lash's layout with a long coal drag..  Didn't work.

 

Conversely, I watched a video of a Forum member pull a long 100+ car freight with 8 engines at the head.

.....

Dennis

 

I'm no physics major, but I don't think the convertible/baseball analogy works. Maybe someone smarter than me can correct me on that. I think the ball would be traveling at 40 mph not 90.
Physics majors?
 
Regards,
 
Tom
 
Originally Posted by Jim Policastro:
Originally Posted by Marty R:

Why does it work? I understand that if 2 people grab the same rope, they can pull more. but if I hold the rope in one hand, and you pull my other hand (which is how I picture double heading- couplers act as hands, not a common rope) how does that help? Why isn't the last loco doing all the work? Why isn't it's motor, the limiting factor?

 

 

 

Ah, vectors!

 

Using your example, first person pulls on rope with 50 lbs of force. Second, person pulls on first person with 40 lbs. As long as both keep pulling (and the first person keeps all body parts intact and attached firmly to the rope), the rope has 50 lbs plus 40 lbs = 90 lbs exerted on it.

 

Same as if you stand in a convertible doing 50 mph and throw a baseball forward at 40 mph, someone on the ground trying to catch it sees a 90 mph baseball coming toward him.

 

Jim

 

 

Originally Posted by Jim Policastro:
Originally Posted by Marty R:

Why does it work? I understand that if 2 people grab the same rope, they can pull more. but if I hold the rope in one hand, and you pull my other hand (which is how I picture double heading- couplers act as hands, not a common rope) how does that help? Why isn't the last loco doing all the work? Why isn't it's motor, the limiting factor?

 

 

 

Ah, vectors!

 

Using your example, first person pulls on rope with 50 lbs of force. Second, person pulls on first person with 40 lbs. As long as both keep pulling (and the first person keeps all body parts intact and attached firmly to the rope), the rope has 50 lbs plus 40 lbs = 90 lbs exerted on it.

 

Same as if you stand in a convertible doing 50 mph and throw a baseball forward at 40 mph, someone on the ground trying to catch it sees a 90 mph baseball coming toward him.

 

Jim

 

Thank you Jim. You brought me right back to High school physics which is what you taught as I recall.

I loved physics class. Not because I understood it but because it was like a magic show to me.

I enjoyed your article in OGR run 275, January 2015 by the way!

TJ

I guess old physics teachers just can't quit!

 

The example of the convertible and baseball is accurate. To be precise, I should say a 90 mph baseball relative to the ground.

 

The Mythbusters took on the problem of whether the damage caused by two autos each travelling at 50 mph toward each other head-on was really the same a single auto hitting a brickwall at 100 mph.

 

They found that the effect wasn't really quite as much as the single car at 100 mph. But, that was due to the way materials deform, etc. The relative speed was still 100 mph between the two - just didn't produce the damage.

 

Now - back to trains!

 

Jim

Ok, In conventional, one engine(& tender if applicable) is faster than the other at no load speed , even if only slightly. I lead with the engine that jumps first from a dead stop. It stops it from pushing on the lead engine or tender causing jerks till they sync.

 

But what if the ball was in a box with a cat? 

 

4-4-0+4-4-0=ƒµ∩³ , Those are my credentials.

 

  

Last edited by Adriatic
Jim
in both automobile cases the driver will DIE!!!
 
Originally Posted by Jim Policastro:

I guess old physics teachers just can't quit!

 

The example of the convertible and baseball is accurate. To be precise, I should say a 90 mph baseball relative to the ground.

 

The Mythbusters took on the problem of whether the damage caused by two autos each travelling at 50 mph toward each other head-on was really the same a single auto hitting a brickwall at 100 mph.

 

They found that the effect wasn't really quite as much as the single car at 100 mph. But, that was due to the way materials deform, etc. The relative speed was still 100 mph between the two - just didn't produce the damage.

 

Now - back to trains!

 

Jim

 

Originally Posted by Dennis:

In other words to clarify further:  two automobile hitting each other head on at 50 mph is an impact of 50mph for each car.  Each car acts like an immoveable brick wall to the other.

.....

Dennis

Dennis,

 

Interesting that you used the word "immoveable".  It would seem to me that each car acts more like a brick wall moving toward the other at 50mph.

 

Hmmmmm.....

 

Ed

In a head on collision where both cars are abruptly stopped, momentum is conserved.  A 2000 lb car has half the momentum of a 4000 lb car, and so if both are moving at 60 mph when they hit, the total momentum is 4000 lb * 60 mph - 2000 lb * 60 mph = 2000 lb * 60 mph = 120,000 lb-mph.  The cars are not going 60 mph after the collision, but rather 120,000 lb-mph / 6000 lb = 20 mph.  Both are going in the same direction and the heavy car won the battle as its speed dropped from 60 mph to 20 mph in the same direction, but the light car had it speed changed from 60 mph to 20 mph in the opposite direction, a change of 80 mph.  

The units I have chosen to use are not what a physics major would use.  He would use slugs for the mass of each car and ft/second for the velocity, but he would get the same answer.

This is a sophomore physics problem.

Originally Posted by Marty R:
So 2 questions. 1 practical, 1 theoretical

 

Theoretical

Why does it work? I understand that if 2 people grab the same rope, they can pull more. but if I hold the rope in one hand, and you pull my other hand (which is how I picture double heading- couplers act as hands, not a common rope) how does that help? Why isn't the last loco doing all the work? Why isn't it's motor, the limiting factor?

 

Practical - it's a 2 parter

 

1) If I put the GG1 behind the Berk, do I need to lose the water tender? If they are perfectly speed matched (As DCS should be). I'd think I'm fine.

 

2) Since I went with the best tach tape in the kit, the GG1 should match well. But, if it doesn't, won't it be the same as you pulling my hand? Either you will be tearing me in half, or I will be pushing you, in addition to pulling the train.

 

Originally Posted by JohnB:

it it is the same as adding horses to pull a wagon. The more you add the more weight you can pull.

 

1280px-Medieval_horse_team

The horse-team analogy is a good discussion tool.  In above photo from Wikipedia, all horses directly pull on the drawbar.  So unlike MU coupled engines, the force applied to the wagon is not all on the last horse closest to the load.  A "clever" lazy horse could walk along at the exact speed the wagon (consist) is moving providing just enough tension on the drawbar but not provide any useful pulling power on the drawbar.

 

Originally Posted by Adriatic:

Ok, In conventional, one engine(& tender if applicable) is faster than the other at no load speed , even if only slightly. I lead with the engine that jumps first from a dead stop. It stops it from pushing on the lead engine or tender causing jerks till they sync.

 

Like the horse team example, if the engine closest to the load in a MU is pulling the consist, a "clever" lazy lead engine going at exactly the speed of the working engine can provide no effective work and it's drawbar-coupler would be slack.  The term "slacker" comes to mind...just going along for the ride.  It could be worse with the lead engine actually retarding the consist by not even keeping up so the working engine has to push it up to speed with the drawbar-coupler in compression.

 

So back to trains.  Say we have engines that can safely (without burning up the motors) pull up to 1 lb at the drawbar at 20 sMPH.  Let's say cars at 20 sMPH require 0.1 lbs-force to pull them so each engine can pull 10 cars.  Ideally 2 engines can then pull 20 cars, 3 engines can pull 30 cars, and so on.  This requires very careful matching/synchronization.  With 3 engines, the drawbar between the lead and 2nd engine would have 1 lb on it, the drawbar between the 2nd and 3rd engine will have 2 lbs on it, and the drawbar between the 3rd engine and the 30 cars would have 3 lbs on it.  By the way, the last coupler between the 29th and 30th car will have 0.1 lbs on it.  Each engine only provides 1 lb of force but they all sum together (vectors from high-school physics).  But this is theoretical.

 

In practice model engines will be slightly speed mis-matched even with the "digital" precision of matched tach-tapes.  Of course the engines move at the same average speed but there is a complex interaction of pushing/pulling with the force on the couplers changing, with wheels intermittently spinning/skidding to equalize engine speeds, and so on.  The net effect will be 3 engines will pull more cars than 1 engine but not 3 times.  Complex electronics could be added to synchronize multiple engines but you couldn't afford it and why bother...just run your MU's and have fun.

 

There's a similar on-again, off-again discussion about the motors in dual-motor diesels.  I'm not aware of any model train manufacturer that has made the complex electronics to sync the efforts of both motors to maximize efficiency or effective pulling power.  I know some guys have hand-selected motors to get better matching.  In any event, a dual-motor chassis with the simple electrical hookup will pull more than a single-motor chassis and that's good enough to have fun at an affordable price.

 

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Originally Posted by Dennis:

Sorry Jim but that is wrong.  Two cars traveling toward each other colliding at 50mph is the same as one automobile hitting a wall at 50mph.  They don't add together to make the impact 100 mph.

.....

Dennis

 

At the risk of sounding like a rivet-counting, metaphor-mixing physicist, there is a difference between the effects of impact and the relative speed. The relative speed of one car to the other is definitely 100 mph.

 

But, the impact, or more precisely the transfer of energy and momentum, is not the same as a 100 mph collision as described by servoguy.

 

I won't bring up the coefficient of elasticity which is also necessary to accurately describe the energy transfer of a collision (think colliding steel balls vs. colliding lumps of clay)!!!

 

Come to think of it - it's nice being a retired physics teacher!

 

Jim

 

 

Jim, you don't need to consider energy to determine the effects of a head on collision.  It is conservation of momentum that is important.  Energy is not conserved and you should know that.

 

Now if you want to do a detailed analysis of the damage to each car, then you must consider where the energy of each car is dissipated.  This is a difficult problem and is way beyond this forum.

 

My analysis of two cars of different weights hitting head on is exactly correct, assuming the cars hit directly head on.  

 

I never described a 100 mph collision.  I described a collision where both cars were going 60 mph.  The cars had equal speed but not the same momentum.

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