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Working on club standards and we're trying to nail down a number for overhead clearance so that everything will clear. Biggest obstacle is obviously clearance for raised pantographs. There being no overhead wires on a modular layout, the dimension in question is from the railhead to the top of the pantograph when fully raised. I have measurements for some of the common ones (AEM-7, GG-1, E-44, crocodile), but there are others which I don't have access too, or cannot get measurements for at the moment. Locomotives like MILW Bi-polars, Little Joe, Rats, Big Liz, Boxcabs, etc... some others I can't think of as well as the Euro models that are scaled larger than American O. 

Not looking to get an exhaustive list, just looking for raised pantograph height of the really bad offenders (I know the JLC GG1 is one of them, but I don't have one to measure). If max height is 6.25 or less, then I don't need to know about it. I've got that range covered already (AEM-7).

So, if you guys can help me out, and just give me the real bad ones, I'd appreciate it. Looking at going 7" from the railhead for clearance, but if there's something out there that gets too close to comfort, then obviously we would look at going higher, rather than risk mangling a pantograph.

Thanks.

Last edited by Boilermaker1
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I do not have any electric motors out now I can measure, but I have worked on many real pantographs.  On a large pantograph like an S-514, it is about 18 inches tall when it is hooked down, depending on the style of mounting insulator.  Fully raised, I can not touch the top of it standing inside the pan.  I would guess it is about 12 feet tall.  On top of a typical locomotive, maybe 16 feet, plus the 12 feet, would be 28 feet or about 7 inches in O scale. The equipment running with pans, but with no overhead, would look better if the pan height was limited to about 23 feet of about 6 inches.  This would be a typical wire height for a typical older style freight railroad. Modern systems are higher, maybe 26 feet or higher when running 25,000 or 50,000 volt trolley wire.

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