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Thread: Knuckle couplers engaging - GIFs

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    Knuckle couplers engaging - GIFs

    Knuckle couplers engaging.








    Previously:

    Janney semi-automatic railway coupler - GIF and patent
    Train rerailer - GIF
    Railroad track shifter - GIF and photos
    Putting a derailed train back on the rails - GIF and video
    Moving a train manually - video

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    johncg (Apr 13, 2021), nova_robotics (Apr 17, 2021), Rangi (Apr 13, 2021), Scotsman Hosie (Apr 21, 2021)

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    Supporting Member sossol's Avatar
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    Train hardware has fascinated me since I was a kid (lifelong foamer here), but what really baked my noodle was the realization that these chunks of steel small enough that a single person could carry are strong enough to pull over a hundred 30+ ton cars and the thousands of tons of cargo each car holds for thousands of miles. It's one of those things that I understand, yet still blows my mind.


    Neil

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    Scotsman Hosie (Apr 21, 2021)

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    Supporting Member mklotz's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by sossol View Post
    Train hardware has fascinated me since I was a kid (lifelong foamer here), but what really baked my noodle was the realization that these chunks of steel small enough that a single person could carry are strong enough to pull over a hundred 30+ ton cars and the thousands of tons of cargo each car holds for thousands of miles. It's one of those things that I understand, yet still blows my mind.


    Neil
    A similar fascination for me is watching a stationary steam locomotive begin to pull a long train of cars.

    My mind knows the locomotive is very heavy and that means that the pressure of its wheels in the line contact with the track is huge which increases the friction. However, the fact that it is so huge that the loco can get the towed cars moving without the loco wheels spinning is hard to accept.

    I know that sometimes they do slip and locos have sanders but, still, it's hard to accept that it can work.

    In a similar vein, I know that steam engines produce maximum force at zero rpm, but the fact that they can produce enough force to get a train of many, many tons moving from a dead stop is hard to accept.
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    Scotsman Hosie (Apr 21, 2021)

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    Supporting Member sossol's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by mklotz View Post
    A similar fascination for me is watching a stationary steam locomotive begin to pull a long train of cars.

    My mind knows the locomotive is very heavy and that means that the pressure of its wheels in the line contact with the track is huge which increases the friction. However, the fact that it is so huge that the loco can get the towed cars moving without the loco wheels spinning is hard to accept.

    I know that sometimes they do slip and locos have sanders but, still, it's hard to accept that it can work.

    In a similar vein, I know that steam engines produce maximum force at zero rpm, but the fact that they can produce enough force to get a train of many, many tons moving from a dead stop is hard to accept.
    Another mind-melter is that the contact patch of the wheels is a small fraction of an inch (I’ve seen various figures, down to all wheels combined having it the surface area of a dime).

    Neil



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