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I have read in many places that the main consideration when MU-ing diesels is the gearing. The horsepower can be way different among the units but the gearing must be close.Considering this, could you MU two locomotives if one has a 68:19 gear ratio and the other one a 63:15 gear ratio. They work out to 3,54 and 4,2 respectively. Is that close enough or do they need to be closer?
-- a manual transition F3 cannot trail an automatic transition equipped F7.
Thank you for the answers so far. I did not know that there were so many factors to considerIt is interesting that you raise this example. I had read in places that the railroads could not MU some power built in the 1930s or 1940s with some power built in the 1950s and later because the MU plugs were different. It seems that if the braking systems were different, you also could not MU them. F-3s were built from about 1946-1949; F-7s from 1949 to about 1953 or -54. I would guess that some roads did update brake systems on F-3s or FTs, as time passed so that they could all run with each other.It did take until 1958 before the builders that were left all agreed on the same MU plugs. Before that, you could buy adapters. When it came to Baldwins, if you wanted to run them with the others, you had to buy a rather expensive adapter. Few roads did. Oliver iron Mining did, as it wanted its switchers with cabs to be able to control any of the switcher "B" units from Alco, EMD or Baldwin.The F-3/F-7 mention prompts me to mention the specific prototype that led to my question. Can you run an FM Erie with a C-Liner? The Eries were built from 1946-1948 (?). The C-Liners were built in the 1950s. The Eries had 68:19 gearing (3,54:1) wile the freight C-liners had mostly 63:15 (4,2:1). Thus, according to what another poster responded, the C-Liner would have to lead. You could not run an Erie A with a C-Liner B, but you could run A-A, as long as the C-Liner leads or run a C-Liner A with an Erie B. The freights on my pike usually run at about twenty five miles per hour, so speed is not a major concern.
I don’t think the Erie engines were built with MU on the noses on some cases they were added later. if you wanted to run multiple engines of mixed type back in the early days, you pretty much had to use two engine crews.At least until the mechanical department came up with a plan to standardize their fleet.