In the topic on the SRR Ps-4 Pacific, a poster mentioned their RS5 equipped engine had a “variable and quilling whistle”. I thought only Legacy engines had this feature. My Lionel Y3 with RS5 had a great sounding whistle, but I had limited control of it with my CAB-1 (I have not tried it with my CAB-2 yet). Did RS5 engines have a quilling whistle? Thanks.
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Quillable whistles are with Legacy only. RS5 had multi-tone whistles but could not truly be "quilled".
Most "pre legacy" Lionel locos have a variable whistle(3 tones) based on locomotive speed. and/or length of time you hold down the button. I.E. when the loco is parked a quick press and release yields a short "toot", when highballing, holding the button down longer yields a more powerful "crossing" type blast(s) which will usually vary with each press and mimmick the long, long, short, long, that is typical at a crossing.Not the same as a legacy quillable but IMO a very close second.
All RS uses sound "snippets" to assemble the whistle/horn on the fly. The difference between 2.5 through 4, 5, and Legacy are the number/amount of snippets (RS 5) and the ability to control the assembly (Legacy).
but not all modern real steam whistles were "quillable". Some were operated
pneumatically(or steam-ically? - new word) by a cylinder at the whistle, which was activated in the cab by a valve opened by some means - like a rope or lever. The whistle could, of course, be made to blow all the needed patterns, but it was an on-or-off
device, and could not be "played." I believe that the modern NYC steamers were like
this, and I suppose others.
So if I'm correct in all this, our non-quillable whistles may be far more prototypical than
the fancy-schmancy Legacy items, depending upon the prototype. Me, I like the "blat"
air horn on the SP GS and AC classes (at least the AC-9 Limas), and the NYC 6000's (Niagaras), and others, I guess.
So unexpected.
"fancy-schmancy" prototype