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Originally Posted by Fridge56Vet:
Originally Posted by OGR Webmaster:

Beautiful locomotives...carrying some of the worst-sounding whistles I have ever heard! 

Can't decide if they sound more like a semi-defective air raid/tornado siren or me blasting on my recorder from 4th grade music class.

Thats true the sound from that whistle is a crime.Wonder who came up with that god awful whistle?

Whooo, boy, those whistles are piercing!  But have kind of a "continental flair" to them. 

Possibly the most beautifully restored locomotives I have ever seen. Guess Thailand has become sufficiently enriched to support fan trips. Nice for them, but probably at our expense, with the off-shoring of our manufacturing to countries like Thailand. Guess soon we will be hanging on for dear life on the roof tops of passenger cars, and the Thai's will be rocketing around on bullet trains.

    Possibly the worst steam whistle I ever heard was on a Mexican 4-8-4. It sounded like a monotone Whoopi Cushion.  In the steam days in Mexico, locomotives were assigned to indivdual crews and they decorated them to their distinct taste.

     Those locomotives look like Japanese power. Wonder if they were consructed in Japan?

Rob,

     Yes I noticed how they were double headed too, back to back like diesels. Never saw that before maybe it is a over seas thing.

 

Rich,

     Do you have any experience with steam engines double headed tender to tender?

 

Tim,

    Watch what you say about Pennsy whistles! We take that stuff real personal.

 

JohnB

I have taken an excursion out of Steamtown that was double headed using their Pacific and Mikado about 10 years ago and they were double headed both engines pointed in the same direction. Also have watched thousands of videos of the PRR and other roads and never saw two steam engine double headed tender to tender. Was wondering if there is a legit reason for that. From the Thailand video it makes all the sense in the world just like multi unit diesels where each of the end units face opposite directions they do not have to be turned around using a turntable or wry. Smart very smart.

 

JohnB  

taking a closer look at the tandem steamers (YouTube, full screen), at one of the worst sounding clips (about 0:30 in), you can see as both locomotives pass, both locomotives are blowing their whistles (the whistle is in the same cluster as the safeties, but you can definitely pick out the steam exhausting from the whistle in sync with the sound).

 

i thought this might be the case, because they don't only sound shrill which would be bad enough, but the combined tones make quite an inharmonious wail.

 

cheers...gary

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