Trains, not slot cars!...

Hi gang.

I’ve had more than one friend or family member over to see my layout that insisted that I was running my trains “way too slow”. The fact is I run my trains at scale speed (as best I can guess) between 35 to 50 mph depending on whether it’s a steam loco or diesel. Anyways, I keep having to remind these folks that these are trains not slot cars. I do admit however that once in a great while I might goose them up to a much higher speed just for fun but only let them run that way for just a few seconds.

Tracklayer

I thought it would be a neat Idea if I could findt he room to build a Race Way on my layout and demonstrate the differences in scale speed. But like all those others nice to haves it often gets cut out. Besides With all my model air planes an air plane museum would get squeesed in first.

James

I run mine basically at prototypical speeds but I like to run just the locomotives at full speed after I’ve serviced them to shake out the cobwebs.

Do you have them tow a track cleaner to pick up the cobwebs?[:-^]

You mean “coal drags” aren’t supposed to be a race??[%-)][:D]

I run trains at scale speeds. I do like to rev up with a passenger sometimes, or get to a nice clip. I’ve tried flooring it in my genesis challenger on DCC, but I stopped accellerating at 2/3 full throttle, it was going pretty fast then and I slowed it down before (I thought) it would tip over.

That engine can get going pretty fast.

Back in the day, the NYC and PRR did have informal drag races on their parallel mains eastbound from Chicago. IIRC, the PRR K-4 could out-accelerate a NYC Hudson, but the Hudson would win out with a higher top speed. (Yes, Matilda, a bigger firebox does make a difference!)

Of course, Art Arfons (or a ten year old on a bicycle) could whup both their butts in 1/4 mile from a standing start.

As for my layout, the JNR has a 70kph speed limit, plus permanent speed restrictions on some of its curves - and the area I model has more curves than a Hawaiian Tropic competition. Anyone who doesn’t like that is welcome to model the Shinkansen, TGV, maglev or a NHRA drag strip in their own garage.

Chuck (modeling Central Japan in September, 1964 - at prototype speed)

I know what you mean. I like to “burn out the carbon” every now and again, but, if I were to max my locos out, it would take about 10 seconds to cover the loop, so I don’t do that often. It is too depressing…

When I was a kid I always wanted the Tyco slot car track section that was also an HO railroad crossing. Then you could loop an HO train around and your slot car could try to beat the train… what awesome racing! Probably not a good lesson in crossing grade safety. I never did get it.

Chris

It seems like I remember those. I also recall a car and track set where in the commercial they show cars jumping an HO train, one from each direction.

Tracklayer

You mean this?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YngIuQoBRIs

With Dare Devil Jump! I love the fact that it has a slot car controller instead of a power pack!

When asked the #1 most frequently asked question about my trains “How fast do they go?” the correct answer is “Much faster than they should!”.

All John Astin (played Gomez Addams in the TV show The Addams Family) impersonators will be asked to leave the train dungeon forthwith.

Regards,

Charlie Comstock

a:

I do that! Not for cobwebs, but dust. I let a Lifelike F7 run for an half-hour or so at breakneck speed, towing the cleaning car.

Another amusing game I sometimes play out of madness is to take a couple of warp-driven switchers (a Lima 0-4-0 and an old Tyco Plymouth) and then run both on the same pack at maximum speed. The trick, since they have slightly different speeds (antimatter vs. interphase, I suppose) is to select one or the other of two different-length routes in the double-track section (half is single). Good way to polish the track adn blow off steam.

[(-D][(-D][(-D]I get the Gomez question all the time !! “do ya crash’m inta each other?” AAHHH no, do you drive your Big boat directly up on shore?

Terry

One layout I built years ago had a race track on it painted gray on which scale size trucks (with trailers) were running at a scale 55 mph. This gave guests a real good comparison between the speed of the trucks and that of the trains.

Hoople, you could try to set some CVs for top mid andlow speed. Your engine should start creeping at spped step 1, and have a scale max speed.

I’ve got the opposite problem my new Proto-2000 F7s for the Empire Builder aren’t fast enough. I can’t get them over 69 smph. It is sort of sad to see the Empire Builder get thrashed by the NCL going by at 105.

I run DCC and had a work associate over one night who wanted to run the trains. It didn’t take long to discover what he meant was "I want to see how fast they can go.
MY girlfriends older boy is also a speed freak with the Thomas locos…
Needless to say, after a couple eposides I programed all the locos to top out at scale speed. All new diesels are set to whatever the prototype top speed is. Mostly that’s between 70 and 75 mph.
If people want speed, I pull out a passenger train like the Zephyr, which is set to 112 smph. (then I run a freight train and they have to slowdown til a passing siding anyway [}:)])

Tilden

I once had a guy at a train show try to sell me some Minitrix 2-10-0s (the ones with the K-4 shell on a European chassis), by telling me they were some of the fastest N scale engines he owned…

You can go faster with superelevation,and good trackwork.[8D]