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60 cars is "short"! :Dn
I agree with the Gary about the 1' sections. (Heck, maybe 6 or 8 inches is enough). On our club layout we have set up 1' detection sections in front of each signal for the eventual purpose of automatic train running (which hasn't actually happened yet). Generally this means a 1' detection section at the end of each block.
FWIW, we've also divided the remaining lengths of the block in two, the idea being that when a train gets half way through a block it will start slowing down to a crawl so that when it reaches the end section at the signal it will creep to a stop realistically. The 'half-block' sections also come in handy for 'early tumble-down' when going from sidings to single track. Not that any of this necessarily applies to your operational scheme, unless you also like the idea of automatic running...
though I suspect you could have banged out a jmri panel in less time.
Before you commit to too many über-blocks, you might want to verify that 39'+ trains will work reliably enough to be "fun".
* For hidden staging, I would not count on current sensing detection to be 100% reliable about sensing freight cars at the end of a train. It is very reliable for locos however, ...
I think you should be fine with 100 car trains.
Thanks Gary. There seems to be general, implicit assumption of one resistor wheelset per car, is that correct?
I have myself observed that under the right conditions, a freight car actually can roll for quite a distance along some of the (sharp) curves on my layout with both outside wheels of a truck lifted off the rail.
It would probably not be practical to do most/all cars like that, aside from the cost and the work it would probably also put too much of a current load on the layout's booster system.
I think you'll be able to push the limits with you design, although you may need 8 locos to get 100 cars!
Ed, we do have the 1ft 'stop' blocks in a hidden staging yard, and if the trackwork in the yard ladder were a little better I'd probably use them to run into it 'blind', i.e while looking at the jmri panel.
Also I've run 60 car trains over our version of the loop, which is about 24" radius and 2.5 percent grade.
Mega: 100 cars + 8 engines: 468" (39' 0") (equivalent proto = 7800')
For the most part I install them on an inner axle to avoid having resistors possibly fouling coupler draft gear. It is certainly likely that weight is not uniformly distributed across all wheels of a given car at all times.
Back of the envelope calculation: take a 50 car train with 2 active axles per car, giving 100 axles of 10K resistors. This is a net resistance of 100 ohms, and a current of 100 mA at 10 V (to keep the numbers round). This is comparable to having one more loco in the train, so it really shouldn't strain the booster.
I think the main challenge is reliably detecting freight cars in short (turnout) blocks.
That is in each train, right? So 10 trains adds 1A, etc., and they are always drawing power for as long as they are in a live detection block.
I presume that the distance between any two detectable elements (i.e. loco or wheelset-equipped car) cannot exceed the shortest detection block (other than stop blocks). If that is not the case, then what other options are there that will ensure positive detection?
Interesting, but I'm not sure I quite understand your reservations in that case. Is there something about the trackwork that lowers your confidence in the detection?
Hawt! Love to see any pics/videos that you might have!
Or am I misreading this diagram?-Dave
My next step will be to turn down the current threshold and increase the time-out setting for those blocks.