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![]() "Pyromancer" I can see the advantages of this on very long freight trains, even with continuous brakes there must be a lot of slack in a mile long train, but your later post said it was common on passenger trains too - any idea why? Because North American passenger trains have slack. Also permits some leeway when travelling really slowly to a stop, you can keep the train rolling without having to release the brakes to travel that extra say 20 feet to the correct stopping point. I used to power brake even with a trains of two passenger cars and even with the doodlebug, a pre-war railcar. Mid you, in these cases it was power braking with the throttle in notch one. -- Cheers Roger T. Home of the Great Eastern Railway http://www.highspeedplus.com/~rogertra/ |
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