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...while mentioning hydraulic brake lines ...
Air is a fluid...
But is is liquid (as in hydro)? I'm also not sure why all these years those were called "air lines". We just didn't know any better, eh?
Didn't MT already fix the slinky problem by moving the position of the spring so that it is forward of the hollow post inside the coupler boxes?
That doesn't eliminate the slinky effect. As long as there is a spring in the coupler, the slinky effect will be there.
It was a typo being fixed...sorry for those who's head exploded at the thought. Joe
I think folks on Railwire may be surprised at what the customer base
the slinky effect was on the bottom of my priority list. TRW members: Be afwaid! Vewwy afwaid!
To me typo means a spelling error. The "hydraulic line" statement seems to indicate that the person who typed up the survey is not very well informed about how the railroad brakes work.
So lemme see if I got this straight: slinky effects are no big deal, so long as the terminology is correct? Ed
Correct, relocating the spring to either side of the post only means that you will see the slinky when pushing instead of pulling (or vice versa). The only way to get rid of the slinky is to get rid of the spring.Other approaches, like putting one or more "drag springs" on the car axles, are only a band-aid that change the symptom, but do not solve the cause of the issue.Ed
I just take weight out. Then the slinky effect goes away.
In MT cars the entire floor/underbody is a die-cast metal "weight". If you remove that "weight" the body will just fall onto the track.
You didn't fix the cause, you just changed the point at which the springs will resonate (since the mass of the cars is a factor). And if you take the weights out of all your cars, I expect you will introduce other issues.Ed
You didn't fix the cause, you just changed the point at which the springs will resonate (since the mass of the cars is a factor). Ed