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We have whistle steam, moving bells, water pick up spray and  tons of sounds and announcements.....what's next???

While watching a real train video today it hit me.....Slipping wheels!!  Now I know slipping wheels are not a good thing in the real world.....but I love watching a big loco trying to a heavy train and get a little wheel slippage. Maybe the lead and trailing trucks lift slightly and we get some driver spin!!! Make sure the sound matches......and I'm in!!! How about it???

Wasn't that this things biggest issue???

PRRS1c

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This feature was made many years ago....but not on purpose. 

I had a Mantua HO scale Hudson.....it had no traction tires. I found, as a 8 year old, that if I gave it full throttle on start then back off to 1/8 throttle I could get a very realistic slipping action.  But it was a little unreliable in that sometimes at full throttle it would get traction and fly off my 4 x 8 empire. I'd like a system a bit more reliable!!! 

While I enjoy all the bells and whistles of Legacy steam locomotives, I feel the next generation of features should be centered on realistic operation. Maybe that's what Lionel has planned with the force-measuring coupler feature with the new Vision Line steamer. Assuming it is as neat as it sounds unless it filters down to Legacy engines it'll be an isolated feature for one model. 

It'd also be neat to eventually see the next generation of locomotive control by voice command, where an operator talks into a command control headset, and tells an engine, "Erie 3321", proceed on track 1 at 25 mph". "Erie 3321 engage rear coupler", and so forth. It's a logical step forward in command control technology.

Another feature I always wanted was a mini screen on the remote control that gives a cab view of addressed engine. Then I can really "drive" my locomotives around the layout no matter where I am standing.

I doubt we'll see any of these however as it seems the importers struggle with basic QC and operating features working as they're supposed to.

Personally, a "feature" that would be REALLY nice, and prototypical, on future higher detailed steam locomotive models would be: reversing valve gear. The only 3-Rail company that has done this, so far has been Sunset/3rd Rail, on the last model of the C&O H-8 2-6-6-6. It is very visible, when the locomotive goes forward, the appropriate valve gear linkage drops down to "forward gear", and when backing up, the appropriate valve gear linkage moves upward to "reverse gear". 

."Slipping wheels!!  Now I know slipping wheels are not a good thing in the real world.....but I love watching a big loco trying to a heavy train and get a little wheel slippage. Maybe the lead and trailing trucks lift slightly and we get some driver spin!!! Make sure the sound matches......and I'm in!!! How about it???"

"How about the engineer leaning out the cab window ?"

Sparks?

Texas Pete posted:
Roving Sign posted:

I'd like to see locos that broadcast their sounds via bluetooth so you can reinforce the loco sounds with nicer speakers.  Of course you'd still have the sounds from the loco itself for visual cues.

It exists, just not in O, a bloody shame.  Rolling Thunder.  Check it out.

Pete

WOW! - That's it!  Thanks for that link.

So cool that they have the distance:volume control part worked out!

Although it would still be cool to have multi-channel output - for crewtalk-type/passenger sounds - might be neat to have them come from somewhere else on the layout.

Last edited by Former Member
Paul Kallus posted:

It'd also be neat to eventually see the next generation of locomotive control by voice command, where an operator talks into a command control headset, and tells an engine, "Erie 3321", proceed on track 1 at 25 mph". "Erie 3321 engage rear coupler", and so forth. It's a logical step forward in command control technology.

 

It would be a tall order for the train to do voice recognition, but this would not be too difficult to implement today.

A phone or computer would do the voice recognition, and just send the appropriate commands to the Legacy or DCS command base.

Hot Water posted:

Personally, a "feature" that would be REALLY nice, and prototypical, on future higher detailed steam locomotive models would be: reversing valve gear. The only 3-Rail company that has done this, so far has been Sunset/3rd Rail, on the last model of the C&O H-8 2-6-6-6. It is very visible, when the locomotive goes forward, the appropriate valve gear linkage drops down to "forward gear", and when backing up, the appropriate valve gear linkage moves upward to "reverse gear". 

Agreed 100%.  The sight of model steam locomotives going down the tracks with the valve gear on center bothers me.  I've configured the Walshaerts valve gear on one of my engines to be in full forward, but it would be way cool for it to be variable.

The VL Big Boy is really feature rich, with wheel slip, depleting coal load, back draft, twin smoke stacks that pour out lots of smoke, smoking whistle, ditch lights, and the amazing Whistle Effect...Runs Fantastic, Although pricy, the early order pricing was very fair...The Speaker System in this engine is wonderful. Therefore, I think, adding the swinging bell, and the scoop effect will be enough goodies. I think the new coupler pull effect will be great...Blue tooth?  I think there should be a Quality Control Effort second to none....Also, I think going with the Brass/Hybrid ideas would be interesting...So many ideas....That’s why the hobby is so much Fun....Great thread..

I have been able to replicate wheel slip for years.  A light weight engine with old hard tires and too many cars going into a curve will slip almost every time 

Also I have seen video of an H K Porter 2-4-0 (conversion from 0-4-0) make a perfect single revolution wheel slip and then catch traction to start away from the platform with 3 or 4 coaches in tow. I knew the engineer and asked him about it, he said he couldn’t do that exactly the same engine if he tried 100 times.

gunrunnerjohn posted:

All of this stuff sounds great, but who is going to buy the $5,000 locomotives in enough quantity to make the engineering effort to pay off?

The last new loco I bought was the MTH DAP PRR 2-10-4 set......and that was above my pain level. So....no...I'd not pay the going $2K we have now.....but fun to imagine it!!  Everytime I watch the Pennsy Power DVD and the T-1 slips a few times before getting rolling is just cool!! 

palallin posted:

How about this feature:  it runs correctly right out of the box and continues to do so with minimal maintenance for 50+ years?

I'm a conventional runner......I was talking fantasy stuff......Many of my locos were bought with fried electronics or I could not afford them!!! So DOA locos are among my favorites!! .....but I get what you are saying. 

Wheel-slip, yes. Better that more smoke.

My modern TMCC Pullmor 5344 J1 will slip the drivers quite well; If I were to swap the 1-chuff switch (good idea, anyway) for a magnetic reed switch on one of the drivers, add 4 magnets...It would have 4-chuff wheel-slip. Great - another thing on the to-do list (and the Lionel L3 Mohawk with no traction tires is a real candidate, too; that slip looks so real).

To sum up after reading the above: the best way to have wheel slip is to let the drivers slip - and have a chuff-sensor or cam on a driver or driver axle. You don't need to "imitate" slip when you can "initiate" it. It's also another reason to lose the traction tires. I really dislike those things; this would also stop much high-end locomotive abuse: "It pulled 250 cars!" Too bad it can't be an option, as Lionel offered on a few modern Hudsons. Let's leave the traction tires to the "toys". (Too late, I know.)

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