If I may be allowed to add to the discussion. Ever since I read up1950s comment:
As a trains drag pulls on the drawbar , and where the drawbar is attached vertically and what vertical slop it has , the static weight on drivers may differ when under load .
And saw Peteski's sketch:
I started to think. This is not always a good thing for an engineer, but here goes. Peteski's analysis is 100% correct,
providing that the drawbar is located at the same height as the center of the drivers,
and is horizontal, like so:
Now if the drawbar is located higher than the center of the drivers, and is horizontal, we have this:
The drawbar force will tend to lift the forward driver and put more load on the rear driver while the load on the pilot and trailing trucks will not be affected very much. Max pointed out that this can happen to the prototype in an earlier post.
Conversely (how's that for an engineering term?), if the drawbar is located below the center of the drivers, and is horizontal, we have:
This will actually tend to put a little more load on the forward driver, while removing some from the rear driver.
The analysis gets a little more complicated if the draw bar is not horizontal. The fore/aft location of the drawbar attachment on the engine comes into play.
So what does all this mean to Max? It means that, after he has added as much weight to the engine as he can, he can experiment with the vertical location of the drawbar to optimize the tractive effort of the engine.
Hope this helps.
Jim Hale