Originally Posted by OGR Webmaster:
Originally Posted by Rob Leese:
..When I pulled the pin 33 years ago, the "new deal" was train handling using only the dynamics. The engineers instantly hated that...
I have never understood the aversion to using air.
Stretch braking is a necessity in certain situations, but it is becoming a lost art.
On the Ex PRR lines when I hired back in 1979 about all they did was stretch or Power brake. It was all about giving the conductor a smooth ride in the caboose. If he could set a Pepsi on the table and it stay there the entire trip he had a good hogger running the train. I found that with experience you could brake faster and release the brakes faster under power keeping the train stretched than you could taking the time to bunch the train slow it down then stretch the slack back out before getting back under power. What would take a mile to slow down from 50mph to 40mph using the dynamic brake you could do in half a mile stretch braking. It doesn't seem like much but when running the Conrail Single Track Buffalo Line usually the train that was making the better time held the main while the opposing slower train took the siding. This could save you as much a 3 hours returning from Enola back to Clearfield.
Conrail tested an Electronic Brake Train. The guys that got to run it loved it coming down over Horseshoe curve. My understanding was you could graduate the brake on and off like a passenger train. If you got a little to much brake on you could graduate a couple of pounds of air back off as opposed to having to drag the train down the mountain. It is way to dangerous and against the rule to make a running release on the mountain. The one time I had the train the Electronic brake system was cut out. If there was one or more cars that had a defective Electronic brake management just cut out the entire system as opposed to training the crews to cutout that one car using the computer. I never felt that they wanted it to succeed.