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The air brake hose is one larger diameter hose with a silver glad hand at it's end; as viewing the car or locomotive it is located on the right side close to the coupler.The multiple hoses your referring to are for electrical control of multiple locomotives. There are electrical connections for speed, braking, et.al....
Pulled from a quick web search, seems legit. Others may correct as needed "The three hoses you speak of are for locomotive air brakes. On a 26L air system (pretty much standard these days) starting at the center are main reservoir equalization, actuating, and independent apply-release. The main res hoses tie all the main reservoirs in a loco consist together, so you have all locos air capacity to charge the trainline. Actuating is used when an engineer wants to use the train brakes while keeping the slack stretched, an engineer will set the train brakes and then actuate, or "bail off", the engine brakes. Independent apply-release works the engine brakes on a consist.All hoses are set up the same way, the main res hose gladhand is actually 'backwards' from the other two, so you don't get main res air straight to the engine brakes and destroy anything. Only three of the hoses are needed to make everything function, however, some railroads during certain times of the year require all hoses to be connected, the best reason I can think of is for quicker recharge on the main res hoses, and to keep snow and ice out of the gladhands (I have had to try to melt ice out of these hoses before, not fun).Not mentioned here yet is the 27-pin jumper cable that controls electrical functions of the loco consist (throttle, power/dynamic brake, sanders, headlights, and so forth). These are the same on all units now, usually there is one live outlet, and one or more dummy outlets."
This info looks useful:http://www.trainweb.org/sp5623/detail1.htm
All hoses are set up the same way, the main res hose gladhand is actually 'backwards' from the other two, so you don't get main res air straight to the engine brakes and destroy anything. Only three of the hoses are needed to make everything function, however, some railroads during certain times of the year require all hoses to be connected, the best reason I can think of is for quicker recharge on the main res hoses, and to keep snow and ice out of the gladhands (I have had to try to melt ice out of these hoses before, not fun).
What is that pilot photo of?