0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
You don't need the reversing bit to be as long as a whole train.
Lit passenger trains are really the exception here… at my HO club, we have a full consist of the California Zephyr with lighting that is just long enough to bridge both gaps at once. The reverser goes absolutely nuts and you just get a blinking light show. We never had a problem with freight (and we run 100% metal wheels).-Dave
That's because each pass. car has both trucks electrically connected (assuming that both trucks pick up power from both rails). The long wheelbase of those cars, as they travel across the gap, creates a long-duration short. If the reversing section is shorter than the train, then the odds are pretty good that the gap on both ends will be bridged by the passing cars, creating a dead short across the reverse polarity ends of the loop, bypassing the reversing section.