0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic.
I wanted to have a locomotive in the split image scheme in my Seaboard System fleet, which is set in 1983-86, after the merger of the Family Lines roads, including the SCL. I didn't think that any split image schemes survived much past 1976 . . . until now:This is Gainesville Midland No. 10:SBD No. 0010 eventually became and was repainted as SBD No. 8300 then CSXT No. 8300 and then CSXT No. 4600. The beauty of this photo is that even if the date was somehow inaccurate or missing (it's reported on rrpicturearchives.net as May 12, 1984), the SBD cab lettering confirms that it was taken during the Seaboard System years, as this is what the SBD did to locomotives before repainting.
Another photo of SBD/GM 10 taken on 8/3/83: https://c2.staticflickr.com/6/5166/5376095417_d3efe9ded8_b.jpghttps://www.flickr.com/photos/hunter1828/5376095417
Not to further rain on Ed's parade, but I visited the Georgia Museum of Agriculture this weekend and filmed some of the 3' narrow gauge they had on site. In terms of Ed's Law, look at that coupler spacing...
Oh, another Ed's Law discussion?I'll just leave this right here...http://www.douglas-self.com/MUSEUM/LOCOLOCO/swisselec/swisselc.htm
I actually been doing some offhand research to see if I could replicate something like that in the other scale I model in, 16mm out in the garden. Hard to find something that can boil water with low voltage.
Check truck stops. Seriously. There are immersion heating coils you set in a coffee mug to boil water, and they are 12V for plugging into a cigar lighter socket. Primary caution is high current, the ones that actually work are north of 10 amps.Or search on Amazon for "12V Coffee Heater". They're cheap.
The temperature limit of 65°C is attributable to a limit thermostat courtesy of the CPSC. Bypass it and you get boiling. The 150W mug heaters (when bypassed) will probably be sufficient for your idea, 12.5A @ 12V.
Look at cartridge heaters. Used in dies and such, they can be as small as 1/8" diameter and submersible. Can also be configured with an internal thermocouple for automatic temp control. Although I never left it in, I ran a 1/4" die heater cartridge in a small boiler inserted through and held by a standard compression fitting. There was a pressure relief valve for ultimate safety on the boiler but the cartridge on/ off was controlled by a small pressure switch. Saturated steam table tells us pressure = temp, temp = pressure. This is the engine as it was configured running alcohol. It's 1/2" bore x 1" stroke for lots of good demo action. />
You build that engine? There are nuts on the steam engine I work on bigger than that thing.