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On New Year's Day, my son Jim and I were able to run a few trains. We both love modern unit freight trains and decided to run his Detroit Edison coal train.

He pulled 35 empty coalporters with distributed power consisting of two MTH BNSF SD70MAC's on the front, an MTH BNSF ES44DC in the middle, and another MTH BNSF ES44DC on the rear.

We had a lot of fun making this video, I hope that you enjoy it.



Art
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Art,

Nice video and great layout. I have a dozen of those cars and wish I had bought more of them as Jimmy Sutter suggested when I bought the dozen. I mix them with other coal cars to make up a long train.

Are all the engines in that train powered? My MU BNSF has three engines, but the middle one is non-powered. As you probably already have found out, one engine alone can pull a very long train - 30+ cars even up a 2% grade.

Nice work!

Alex
Art, WOW ....
That is a GREAT LOOKING COAL TRAIN!!!!! Your layout is EXCELLENT for running the .... L O N G T R A I N S.....

Do you have plans for a Coal Mine or a Coal Fired Power Plant?

I look forward to being able to run our long CN Coal Trains.We have about 36 Lionel CN Coal Porters and 12 MTH CN Coal Porters to run.
Thanks everybody!

Roger - I too am getting anxious to get my river crossing completed.

Forrest - I'm having too much fun running trains and procrastinating. Big Grin

Alex - The second BNSF SD70MAC Executive is a dummy, the rest are powered. Even though we didn't need the power, the sounds of the powered units in the middle and end are awesome in our opinion.

Bill - I was going to have a power plant but had to give it up in order to have the room for my small Midwestern town. O gauge requires a lot of compromises and priority setting. The one thing I am trying very hard to avoid is the crowded, "fill every square inch", situation.

Art
VERY nice, Art!

As additional information, the BNSF can not operate mid-train DPU units in their hopper trains (emptys) or coal trains (loads) because the coal mines out in Wyoming will not allow it. Seems it is way too difficult for the loader operator to remember to shut off the coal when the mid-train DPU enters the loading silo; many SD70MAC units where covered with 100+ tons of Powder River coal before the mines put a stop to mid train DPU operations.

Thus two on the front and one or two DPU units on the rear is the norm.

I like your method, however MUCH better, since that is what EMD recommended from the beginning of Destributed Power Operations, way back in the early 1990s!
The Canadian Pacific Railway usually runs it's coal train power - (1) up front, (1) mid-train and (1) at the rear of the train. Occasionally, they will go with (2) up front, (1) mid-train and (1) at the rear, just like Art's video. They only use AC traction for hauling coal... ES44AC's and AC4400CW's.

The BNSF coal trains heading to Delta Port in British Columbia, run (2) up front and (2) in the rear. Those trains are usually powered by a combination of GE and EMD power... usually, ES44AC's and SD70MAC's; and some of the MAC's wear the executive scheme, just like Art's.

Art,

I like your layout, I like your trains and I like how you run them.


Rick
Thanks a lot guys!

Eliot - The next video that I take will be of passenger trains arriving and departing Union Station. We just redid the switch machines there and it is running very well now. Jim installed Tortoise switch machines with power routing and I can finally run engines into and out of the yard at prototypical speeds.

BNSF Mike - We were thinking of you as we were making this video and hoping that it would get you going again.

Rich - Thanks and hope to see you Sunday at DuPage.

Hot Water - Thanks and I appreciate your comments regarding prototypical operation. When I think about how these trains are unloaded, it wouldn't work very well with an engine in the middle. They sure run smooth though with the engines spread through the train though.

Art
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