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... if you do a lot of speed matching work ahead of time.
Gary, you may find that DPUs consisted all together work okay if you do a lot of speed matching work ahead of time. But I've always run them separately controlled (which is prototypical).
But I find that my operators are less comfortable with that, at least in the early days, for fear of putting a whole cut on the ground. I do intend to give crews the option, but I don't want to force it on anyone.
Thanks Scott. Sadly it is the same test print that I first tacked up 4 years ago... However, I do rather like it still, so I probably won't change much when I get it professionally printed, whenever that is. -gfhP.S. In scanning through the archives to find the above link, I came across this pre-Vortex photo where I was trying to picture how the Vortex would fit under the Loop shelf:Here's how it fits:(For ops sessions, it is very helpful to have the Vortex visible like this. I need to move the tall cabinet that currently blocks much of it.) It's been a long haul, but with track and wiring almost finished, I'll finally be able to concentrate on more cosmetic projects. That's when the real fun begins.
No risk; no reward. Some of my thoughts on pusher ops after 6 years of having pushers in ops sessions...I believe that to fully enjoy independent pusher ops there needs to be some level of train handling challenge for the crew to overcome. Which means there is a risk of operators failing that challenge which brings intrinsic risk to equipment. And over the course of a 3 hour ops session, a challenging pusher op schedule is likely to result in derailments. Net result is that derailments should be expected and accepted. ...Just my $0.02Md
No risk; no reward.
Note that my opinions would not apply to DPU pushers. In this case the mid and end train helpers might as well be there just for cosmetic purposes and the objective in that case should be zero derailments.
Nailed it! (Well, likely screwed it)
I'm a little surprised to see people here suggesting that rear DPUs should be slowed or 'derated'. In my experience, they should be a notch faster on the throttle going uphill, at least say on a 4x2. Maybe the difference is that my DPUs aren't for show. I only use them on trains that would stall or stringline without them.As a personal preference it would be unacceptable to me to modify a loco to play only a particular role like that.
Umm, I certainly didn't suggest the rear end helper should be slowed; in my experience that's a recipe for disaster. On the hill, it needs to be pushing cars ahead of itself. My experience also tells me that if you have enough power capable of pushing the entire train uphill, you're going to have issues if your front end stalls. This problem diminishes as trains get longer and each set of locos takes care of its share of the train and one simply spins its wheels if the other stalls....Fun stuff,Otto K.
If Danneman was doing this in analog then I can see how maybe it makes sense. But at the risk of repeating myself ad naseum, I feel there's a better solution for DCC: control the head end and helpers separately. If the helpers are pushing too much, notch the throttle down. If they're pushing too little, notch it up. As far as I understand, it's what the prototype does.