Really a dumb question but based on the body of the train, I cant; tell which is front or rear, it is a 1976 vintage Lionel Norfolk and Western and has the red, white, blue paint. I just need to know if the motor goes on the front or rear. The unit seems faster and better with the power wheels in the rear, but in my opinion the body looks backwards.
Your locomotive looks like a GP-9 as it flashes by in the video. The real ones were operated either way - long hood forward, as yours was in the video, or short hood forward.
It is your railroad, so operate the locomotive the way it works best for you.
Which direction is lionel intending it to go. Cab part in the back with long hood forward, or hood in the back and cab in the front? Which way did these travel in real life?
Well LRRC is a railroading club not a real railroad so it really doesn’t matter. [;)] However, Lionel put engineer figures in this engine and if you look at the picture the figures are facing long hood forward so that is how I would run it. BTW - Lionel and MTH put engineer figures in most of their engines today, this helps to determine what the prototypical direction was for that railroad (but they have also been known to get these details wrong as well).
GP-9s, GP-7s and a few others were run either way by the real railroads so it depends on which railroad you are modelling what is prototypical.
If you are using switches with the non-derailing feature, you want the traction tires in the rear. The truck that has the traction tires will not operate the non-derailing feature.
As far as tractive effort is concerned, the rear wheels tend to be more effective, but the situation is rather complicated:
Within each truck, there can be a transfer of weight to the rear wheels equal to the tractive effort of that truck, multiplied by half of the ratio of the height of the truck’s center bearing to the truck’s wheelbase. Since that ratio is about 1/2 and the maximum tractive effort of steel wheels on steel rails is about 1/4, this all amounts to about 1/16 the weight on the truck.
It is possible, by using what are called “traction links”, and by other equivalent means, to eliminate this weight transfer entirely; but this just shifts the problem to the locomotive as a whole. The weight shift then occurs between, not within, the trucks, and depends on the ratio of the coupler height, which is about the same as the center bearing height, to the distance between trucks. This ratio is about 1/10 instead of the 1/4 ratio that exists within the truck, so that’s an improvement.
However, many prototype locomotives do not use traction links; and models certainly do not; so the weight transfer that occurs is completely within the truck. But prototype trucks have the center bearing truly in the center, since they are expected to work equally well in both directions. The toy-train trucks, on the other hand, may have their pivots considerably off center. This is very much the case for the vertical-motor trucks used in Lionel F3s, GP7s, and “EP5s”. These are displaced substantially toward the middle of the locomotive. The result is that the weight shift in the front truck tends to concentrate even more weight on the already more heavily loaded inboard axle, while evening out the weight distribution within the rear truck.
This situation is further complicated by the fact that, unlike prototypes, models are designed without much regard for d
I can’t find one on the Internet either; but perhaps I can describe it for you. Traction links are used with a truck that lacks a fixed center bearing. The truck usually supports the locomotive on resilient rubber blocks. These can transmit vertical forces but not significant horizontal forces. If they were the whole connection between the locomotive and the truck, the truck would simply run out from under the locomotive.
Instead, the truck pulls the locomotive through a traction link, which is a bar connected between the truck and the bottom of the locomotive’s body. The traction link slants diagonally down from the body to a point on the truck and is free to move around a little at each end. If the link were extended in a straight line past the end that connects to the truck, that line would pass through a point at the height of the railheads right under the center of the truck. It is because of this special location that the traction link eliminates weight transfer in the truck.
Normally there would be two traction links per truck, one on each end, so that the locomotive can pull in either direction and–also important–produce a braking force opposite to its traction force in whichever direction it is moving.
Here is a description that I wrote for another forum years ago describing why it works the way it does:
The traction link need not connect at the railhead level to do its job. If it is merely in line with the point at the railhead height at the center of the truck, it will be fully effective. (Of course, he closer one can bring the connection to that point, the less opportunity there is for truck pitching and spring action to misalign the link.)
To see how this works, consider first a truck without a traction link. At rest, there are only vertical forces on it, one downward from the center bearing and four equal force
You must an engineer. [bow] I had to read it a couple of times and I had to make a little sketch, but I think I finally got it. It’s similar to my Weight Distribution system for my trailer hitch, except mine uses Spring Bars.
I take it that this has to be designed in and not something that I could just go out to buy.