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I posted a short video a couple of days ago of running seven trains at one time on my layout.  This morning I decided to run those seven trains again on my three mainlines again, plus eleven cars on four 'Streets loops, three 'Streets big rigs on my country road, and my-moving-boat-on-lake.  Twenty-two moving things was far more movement than I could keep track of.  No one died, but rolling stock was slightly damaged in this incident.

 

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There is no one thing to blame it all on, except me. Contributing problems that caused distractions were: a) block control to space vehicles in 'Streets is not dependable so I was watching too many cars and trucks to intervene when and if one caught another since I had up to six running on one loop, b) I have a number of flatcars that carry piggyback trailers, that have a small ramp that can fold down (I guess so, in the real world, you can drive the trailer off: even when positioned then folded up and over at an angle they somehow vibrate back down flat and bind between cars in turns.  Regardless, whatever happened, I could not keep my eye of everything.  I tried several times but never did get that much running at once . . . 

 

I did manage to get six trains, six cars, and one big rig running at one time - thirteen things moving, which was fun but still a lot to keep aware of what is happening to each, particularly while holding a camera in one hand.

 

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Last edited by Lee Willis
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Originally Posted by josef:

You'll probable be hearing from DOT officials. Was the operator screened for alcohol and or drugs? Have you started moving in the cranes and flatbeds, cleanup crews? Was HAZMAT notified?

I'm confident that NSA has notified the NTSB. There's the making of another book here...

Last edited by Gilly@N&W

I was running 6 on 3 main lines and watching the #2 line closely as it has a 90 deg crossing. Then crash! Breaker trip! A coupler failed on the #3 main line #1 train and the second train ran into the cars of the first train as the first engine raced off into the back of the second train. WHERE IS THE REMOTE! HIT THE MAIN POWER BUTTON! alas, 2 dozen cars in a pile, 2 engines upset and some where I lost my Pepsi. nothing broken and only a little grass to repair. So I feel your pain.

Dan Chase

Originally Posted by Lehigh74:

The streets look super.

 

This seems like an argument against your other thread (Why I run Conventional).  Wouldn't a collision have been avoided with DSC speed control?

I don't think so, I think the same would have happened had they been under any ty[eo f speee control.  The four trains on the same loop were all cruising at exactly the same speed, an MTH BR-44 at 12 volts and three LC+ locos set to match them all running at about a scale 29 mph.  No problems with them: what happened is that two of the flatcars with ramps (see contributed reason (b) above,  tangled on a curve and somehow that tipped or shook a tractor being a tractor being transported out of its chocks and it tumbled down the hill in front or another train, which de-railed.  Just about then I saw the first wreck and went to shut down the power when a third loco ran into the back of the first de-railed train.  Then the bus coming along the road hit one of the de-railed cars.  By then though, I cut the master kill switch.

What Happens When You Exceed Your Bandwidth to Keep Track of Every Track

 

 Twenty-two moving things was far more movement than I could keep track of.  No one died, but rolling stock was slightly damaged in this incident.

 

Lee

 

As you well know, if you want to operate 22 or more moving things and avoid damaging accidents you need more 'bandwidth."

 

Just like in the 1:1 scale world there are two ways to do that.  You can:

 

A.  Throw more people at the problem.

 

OR

 

B.  Deploy technology that increases the efficiency of one person.

 

In the real world throwing bodies at a problem is prohibitively expensive.  For a home layout operator it may be inconvenient.

 

Most of your locomotives have technology on board that you have chosen not to fully utilize.  It would be easy for you to begin to use it and it would be relatively inexpensive for you to do so.

 

Using the on board technology in our trains also opens up possibilities for automation and more efficient user interfaces that allow one person to track and control more than they can with conventional control.

 

If damaging accidents are bad...

 

 

 

...then Layout SCADA is a good thing. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Last edited by Ted Hikel

Most of your locomotives have technology on board that you have chosen not to fully utilize.  It would be easy for you to begin to use it and it would be relatively inexpensive for you to do so.

 

Except Lee states the cause of the accident was, "that two of the flatcars with ramps (see contributed reason (b) above,  tangled on a curve and somehow that tipped or shook a tractor being a tractor being transported out of its chocks and it tumbled down the hill in front or another train, which de-railed."

 

Technology or lack there of, had nothing to do with the accident.

 

Coincidently as a 100% DCS user, I have PS2 trains that don't all go the same Scale speed as indicated on the remote.  So a user must always be on the lookout because eventually a PS2 train going 40 SMPH will catch another PS2 train going 40 SMPH if I leave them unattended long enough.

 

Ron

 

Lee states the cause of the accident was, "that two of the flatcars with ramps (see contributed reason (b) above,  tangled on a curve and somehow that tipped or shook a tractor being a tractor being transported out of its chocks and it tumbled down the hill in front or another train, which de-railed."

 

Technology or lack there of, had nothing to do with the accident.

 

If Lee utilized the available technology to cut his workload controlling trains he could have more "bandwidth" available for spotting other problems and improve his response time when a problem does begin to develop.

 

Last edited by Ted Hikel
Originally Posted by Ron045:

 

Coincidently as a 100% DCS user, I have PS2 trains that don't all go the same Scale speed as indicated on the remote.  So a user must always be on the lookout because eventually a PS2 train going 40 SMPH will catch another PS2 train going 40 SMPH if I leave them unattended long enough.

 

Ron

 

I had much the same problem with some Legacy locos back when I ran Legacy (eight or nine years ago) but not, so far, with LC+ What is neat about the LC+ locos I have so far is that when set to the same position the five steamers I have all go exactly the same speed.  It can run one up to within a foot of the next and adjust it to the same position and they will orbit the layout like that.  Awesome.  Again, the problem was those psky piggyback cars and their ramps.  I don't understand how they manage to flop over and bind, but problem solves (I Plastruck cemented them in the up position). 

 

I find I am most comfortable running about nine"things" if no more than three are only any loop.  This afternoon I had Jeanie and Bill Sellar (Ogaugenut on the forum) visit.  I ran the BR-44 and two LC+ locos with full 12-car trains on mainline #1, setting the LC+ steamers to match the BR-44's speed, MTH NW-2 cow and calf and train on #2 loop, WBB 44 tonner cow and calf and train on loop #3, only three cars in my downtown streets, This way there was a lot of movement but not so much risk of something getting close to something else.  It was not only not too much to watch and control, but allowed me plenty of attention span to talk with them for a couple of hours.  

 

And I really love the BR-44.  Maybe the finest thing MTH has ever made!   Just fantastic!

Last edited by Lee Willis
Originally Posted by Bill Webb:

My son told me that this is an everyday occurrence between Raleigh and Fuquay. And they have a driver for everything. But no master kill switch.

I agree.  If you watch the local news there is a crash on those roads they report every evening.  People get killed once or twice a year.  

 

As to kill switches, well, don't mention them to the police over in Durham, or they will think you are talking about switchblades!

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