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question - anybody else having this issue based on weight and length of train?

The Evolution plastic couplers pop apart on my oil train when I exceeded 45 cars. I need to strategically place the Evo couplered cars at the rear of the consist reducing the weight.

Do the Protocraft couplers do the same?

Kadee plastic couplers will do this in effect causing the shank to bend upward on both couplers enough to pop them apart.

TimDude is planning on using PC couplers on 50+ reefers! I'm also considering them too but tried them on a test car and same scenario occurred. The knuckles pop apart under a draw bar of about 90 plus lbs. are you guys seeing this? I would like to use PC couplers on my passenger consists however most of these consist far exceed 100 lbs on the coupler. Metal Kadees are the only coupler that works.
Last edited by Erik C Lindgren
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Fellow railroaders...

 

We need "Safety shelf" couplers. If a working model made in metal were available as in the Prototype, this problem of "popping apart" would be impossible 98% of the time if at all. The safety shelves won't allow the knuckles to override each other. I'm not saying this is a "cure all," but it would be a VERY positive start.

 

I don't have track down yet, so I can't answer my question about whether the Protocraft couplers will work on long cars exceeding 60' and on what radius track. The action is fantastic on the new Ready to run models!

 

I've addressed this Shelf coupler issue here & on other sites, but for modelers 1975 onward these couplers are a "must." Watch modern freight trains & see how many couplers without safety shelves are on that train. If a working model were made,it would help stop the problem mentioned here.


On long trains 15 cars in length, how wide of a curve is needed to keep the cars from stringlining? I've got 13 4750 cu ft cvd grain hoppers coupled together and am wondering about this. In HO I pulled 12 cars around a 19" curve with no problem, so I'm thinking pulling a 13-15 car train in O scale around no less than 50" curves  should be a problem but I'm only "guesstimating" here.

 

Thank you for all inputs here.

 

Al Hummel 

 


EDITED BY THE WEBMASTER...

to fix some formatting problems and eliminate some extraneous text that was at the bottom of this post.

Last edited by Rich Melvin
Originally Posted by Hot Water:
Originally Posted by Alan Hummel:
Fellow railroaders.We need "Safety shelf" couplers. 

Not for those folks modeling prior to 1960, or especially the 1930s thru mid 1950s "steam era"!

They would not solve the problem described in the original post anyway. The couplers are pulling apart not compressing together and riding up over each other.

 

I have heard that the SJ couplers can pull apart under a load. I guess you need to watch how many diecast cars you put in a train.

Originally Posted by George Losse:
Originally Posted by Hot Water:
Originally Posted by Alan Hummel:
Fellow railroaders.We need "Safety shelf" couplers. 

Not for those folks modeling prior to 1960, or especially the 1930s thru mid 1950s "steam era"!

They would not solve the problem described in the original post anyway. The couplers are pulling apart not compressing together and riding up over each other.

 

I have heard that the SJ couplers can pull apart under a load. I guess you need to watch how many diecast cars you put in a train.

Thanks for that additional information. I didn't think that "shelf couplers" would have solved such a problem anyway, so I'm glad that you brought that up.

That brass Hi Sierra/Clouser version pulls apart?  Mine has a positive locking feature, and it looks like the brass has to fail first.

 

I, and probably most of us, are unfamiliar with the problem, not having the space or inclination for 40- car freight trains.  My max is 15, and even then it spans half of my loop.

Originally Posted by Charlie Morrill:

       
Originally Posted by Erik C Lindgren:


 I would like to use PC couplers on my passenger consists however most of these consist far exceed 100 lbs on the coupler. Metal Kadees are the only coupler that works.

Do you have a O scale locomotive that will LIFT 100 lbs?


       


I have a 24 car brass mail train- each car exceeds 5 lbs. most are 6.5-7 lbs. 3 Key PA's do pull it fine. And yes the drawbar is over 100 lbs.
Originally Posted by bob2:

       

That brass Hi Sierra/Clouser version pulls apart?  Mine has a positive locking feature, and it looks like the brass has to fail first.

 

I, and probably most of us, are unfamiliar with the problem, not having the space or inclination for 40- car freight trains.  My max is 15, and even then it spans half of my loop.


       


I am referring to the new couplers. Not the Clouser traction couplers

What radius track are you using where the passenger train is running? NICE!!



On Tuesday, February 3, 2015 2:02 PM, O Gauge Railroading On Line Forum <alerts@hoop.la> wrote:


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This train is around 65 lbs on the coupler.   This post contains 1 photo. View This Reply
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Allan, where is all this extra text coming from (highlighted in red) every time you post? You absolutely MUST fix this or I'll have to suspend you again. I cannot keep cleaning up the mess you leave every time you post!

Last edited by Rich Melvin
Originally Posted by TimDude:

I want to make a draw bar pull test car to assist in an experiment in testing these Protocraft couplers. Anybody got any suggestions for a good strain gauge I can mount to a pair of Atlas truck assemblies?

I don't know about a "strain gauge" but, how about placing a fish weighing spring type scale between the coupler on the engine and the first car?

Yea, strain gauge is just a fancy word for fish scale. I just bid on a good candidate on ebay and will report back. Erik and I have been talking offline and we are going to do some destructive testing to see what the limits of Protocraft couplers are. Should make for an interesting video.
 
Originally Posted by Hot Water:
Originally Posted by TimDude:

I want to make a draw bar pull test car to assist in an experiment in testing these Protocraft couplers. Anybody got any suggestions for a good strain gauge I can mount to a pair of Atlas truck assemblies?

I don't know about a "strain gauge" but, how about placing a fish weighing spring type scale between the coupler on the engine and the first car?

 

I am, everything will be standard Kadee with a set of cars with matching Protocraft on one end coupled to each other. I already have those cars made up as transition cars between Kadee and Prtocraft.
Just bid on "fish scale" on ebay and am digging through my parts box looking for a set of trucks to use (I might as well make two sets of draw bars, one for 3 rail also).
My thinking right now is, engine(s), fish scale car, Protocraft test cars and then start stacking up Kadee cars for weight. Open to suggestions though?
 
Originally Posted by mwb:
 
.... some destructive testing to see what the limits of Protocraft couplers are.

Please use some other couplers as controls - 804 and 805.  That will put your testing into good perspective for all

 

Originally Posted by TimDude:
I am, everything will be standard Kadee with a set of cars with matching Protocraft on one end coupled to each other. I already have those cars made up as transition cars between Kadee and Prtocraft.
Just bid on "fish scale" on ebay and am digging through my parts box looking for a set of trucks to use (I might as well make two sets of draw bars, one for 3 rail also).
My thinking right now is, engine(s), fish scale car, Protocraft test cars and then start stacking up Kadee cars for weight. Open to suggestions though?
 
Originally Posted by mwb:
 
.... some destructive testing to see what the limits of Protocraft couplers are.

Please use some other couplers as controls - 804 and 805.  That will put your testing into good perspective for all

 

engine(s), fish scale car,  --- so how is that car to be coupled to the engine?

 

Protocraft test cars and then start stacking up Kadee cars for weight. ---- I'd look for a car you can connect directly to controlled dead weights and not to other cars with couplers involved; barbell weight, lead bricks, etc.....

I am planning to get one of these:
and then fabricate a set of aluminum draw bars that will replace the S hook and Carabiner and the Atlas trucks and Kadees would be installed on the Aluminum bars allowing the scale to move freely.
As to using cars or weight "sleds", I am thinking of the added dynamic of slack in and out of the train? I may be worried about nothing?
 
Originally Posted by mwb:
Originally Posted by TimDude:
I am, everything will be standard Kadee with a set of cars with matching Protocraft on one end coupled to each other. I already have those cars made up as transition cars between Kadee and Prtocraft.
Just bid on "fish scale" on ebay and am digging through my parts box looking for a set of trucks to use (I might as well make two sets of draw bars, one for 3 rail also).
My thinking right now is, engine(s), fish scale car, Protocraft test cars and then start stacking up Kadee cars for weight. Open to suggestions though?
 
Originally Posted by mwb:
 
.... some destructive testing to see what the limits of Protocraft couplers are.

Please use some other couplers as controls - 804 and 805.  That will put your testing into good perspective for all

 

engine(s), fish scale car,  --- so how is that car to be coupled to the engine?

 

Protocraft test cars and then start stacking up Kadee cars for weight. ---- I'd look for a car you can connect directly to controlled dead weights and not to other cars with couplers involved; barbell weight, lead bricks, etc.....

 

Originally Posted by TimDude:
I may be worried about nothing?

Possibly.  But, let's not get OCD over this either..unless that works for you....then by all means embrace it totally.

 

I'm just curious to see what the results are from a well thought out and executed test.

 

Might be an interesting note to publish,

Eric, when you mention a train that is 65 pounds (or 100 pounds) on the coupler, I assume you referring to the actual weight of the train, rather than to the tractive effort required to move it.

 

I weight my freight cars to about one pound each, so a 40-car train weighs about 40

pounds. But that does't mean the coupler of the engine pulling the train has to be able to support 40 pounds. That would only happen if the train were trying to go straight up in

the air at 90 degrees.

 

In other words, the engine doesn't have to exert one pound of pull (and the coupler doesn't have to withstand a load of one pound) in order to move an O-scale boxcar weighing one pound (even without roller bearings).

 

 

Without belaboring the point, the weight of the train is not the same as the force at the drawbar.  Steel wheels on steel rail enable a lot of tonnage To move very efficiently.  I have heard it said that the only more efficient way to move stuff is a barge down river.

 

That said, there was a test setup that involved a pulley and a platform suspended beneath the railroad.  The locomotive would pull horizontally, and the platform would be lifted.  Put a hundred pounds on that platform, and I bet there is no O scale locomotive that will lift it - well, maybe Gerry White's Triplex, but that one was half the nation's lead supply in one locomotive.

 

And no - the Hi Sierra/Clouser coupler was a brass AAR copy of the Janney freight coupler.  To pull it open would mean shearing off the internal shank or busting the knuckle casting.  Good couplers, and expensive.

 I use only KD. I don't have much high end equipment. I do run long trains in both O scale and G. I have been saying for years how amazing these trains are to pull so much.

 In G scale, the (plastic) gears inside of some engines will fail if you don't add helpers to long trains.

 In O scale, I was snapping the older Atlas couplers on a fairly level layout. I have one grade that maybe rises around 3/4" spread out well as it navigates the basement.

 I can't compare much with your level of equipment and I run differently. I run mainly modern era so using rear or even mid-train helpers smooth everything out for me. Even when I pull out the steam era, if I don't have a helper the train will fail somewhere. The G scale equipment needs modifying to just get the couplers all at the same height. Still there's vertical coupler movement from terribly designed mounting pads. Almost every brand is different. So I'm used to using helpers and swapping out all new equipment to KDs in both scales.

 I feel your pain!!

Last edited by Engineer-Joe

I weight my freight cars to about one pound each, so a 40-car train weighs about 40 pounds. But that does't mean the coupler of the engine pulling the train has to be able to support 40 pounds. That would only happen if the train were trying to go straight up in the air at 90 degrees.

 

Mr. Smith

 

Thank you for pointing that out to our OP.  If he could take an actual measurement at the drawbar force to move that train I'd bet it is a whole lot closer to 10 pounds than it is to 100.

 

I have a 24 car brass mail train- each car exceeds 5 lbs. most are 6.5-7 lbs.

 

An 8000 scale ton passenger train?  Yikes!  As Joe said, distributed power would be realistic.

 

Why do the cars weigh 2 to 3 times the scale weight of the Ferdinand Magellan?  Are the sides and windows bullet proof?

 

3 Key PA's do pull it fine. And yes the drawbar is over 100 lbs.

 

I doubt three Key PAs can produce 100 pounds of drawbar pull even with depleted uranium weights and Goodyear Eagle traction tires. 

 

In all seriousness, the force needed to lift such a heavy train up a 3% grade at nearly 50 smph is only about 7 1/2 pounds.  The added power requirement on the grade would be about 10 watts or 0.8 amps at 12 volts.  That would be in addition to the rolling resistance of the train at that speed on level track.  If your power supply has volt and amp meters do you see values in that range when you run the train onto a grade ?

 

If you are experiencing excessive drawbar forces pulling this train perhaps you should look at the rolling resistance of the trucks rather than just looking at the strength of the couplers.

 

Wow Mr  Hikel I'm impressed!!

Your a legend------ no your just plain INCREDIBLE !

A blessing to us all-- you solved it! It's all solved - TimDude cancel the bid were done!

Originally Posted by Ted Hikel:

       
I weight my freight cars to about one pound each, so a 40-car train weighs about 40 pounds. But that does't mean the coupler of the engine pulling the train has to be able to support 40 pounds. That would only happen if the train were trying to go straight up in the air at 90 degrees.

Mr. Smith

Thank you for pointing that out to our OP.  If he could take an actual measurement at the drawbar force to move that train I'd bet it is a whole lot closer to 10 pounds than it is to 100.

I have a 24 car brass mail train- each car exceeds 5 lbs. most are 6.5-7 lbs.

An 8000 scale ton passenger train?  Yikes!  As Joe said, distributed power would be realistic.

Why do the cars weigh 2 to 3 times the scale weight of the Ferdinand Magellan?  Are the sides and windows bullet proof?

3 Key PA's do pull it fine. And yes the drawbar is over 100 lbs.

I doubt three Key PAs can produce 100 pounds of drawbar pull even with depleted uranium weights and Goodyear Eagle traction tires.

In all seriousness, the force needed to lift such a heavy train up a 3% grade at nearly 50 smph is only about 7 1/2 pounds.  The added power requirement on the grade would be about 10 watts or 0.8 amps at 12 volts.  That would be in addition to the rolling resistance of the train at that speed on level track.  If your power supply has volt and amp meters do you see values in that range when you run the train onto a grade ?

If you are experiencing excessive drawbar forces pulling this train perhaps you should look at the rolling resistance of the trucks rather than just looking at the strength of the couplers.

Last edited by Erik C Lindgren

Your a legend------ no your just plain INCREDIBLE !

Erik

 

I hope that isn't (too) sarcastic. 

 

Just remember in O scale it is all about 110592. 

 

B Smith and Bob2 were right on. You have a very, very heavy train to move but your couplers don't have to lift the whole train vertically.

 

At 48 SMPH (one real mile per hour) you are traveling about 1.4 feet per second.  Even on a 3% grade you are only lifting the train about a half an inch per second.  That takes some real work, but only about 10 watts.  Be aware that 10 watts is the work output, the input will be higher.  And the level rolling resistance, which is likely quite substantial, will take more power as well.

 

If your PAs really could produce 100 pounds of drawbar pull at 48 SMPH they would be putting out about 200 watts or 1/4 HP.  That would be one heck of a lot of model railroading power.  A fraction of that should get the job done.

 

 

 

Last edited by Ted Hikel
On Tuesday, February 3, 2015 8:17 PM, O Gauge Railroading On Line Forum <alerts@hoop.la> wrote:


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Originally Posted by Alan Hummel:

 <snip>

Allan, where is all this extra text coming from (highlighted in red) every time you post? You absolutely MUST fix this or I'll have to suspend you again. I cannot keep cleaning up the mess you leave every time you post!

Rich,

It looks like he's copy/pasting the text from an email notification rather than replying directly to the same comment in-thread.

 

---PCJ

"so I'm thinking pulling a 13-15 car train in O scale around no less than 50" curves  should be a problem but I'm only "guesstimating" here"

 

  My last O scale layout had 46 inch radius curves and could handle 20 car trains all right. The only problem I recall was when a 4 wheel front runner intermodal car was coupled to an 89 foot pig flat and got thrown off the rail from mis match or coupler overhang beyond  truck mounts. 

   To test breaking strain of couplers one wouldn't need a train, just screw the coupler to something solid and pull on the scale till it breaks or until you get tired. I can't recall ever breaking a Kadee O scale coupler so 20 car freights must be well within their rating.

    For any layout big enough to approach the breaking strength of couplers I'd use kadees since a layout that big will likely never be finished to fine scale standards and operations will probably be the focus instead of details? ........DaveB

 

Originally Posted by rdunniii:

Micromark has a model railroad specific version of a fish scale if anyone is interested.  For unit trains I use dummy couplers cause a loaded unit coal train (once I get it all together) will weigh over 300 pounds.

Sounds like quite a train as 3 lbs a car implies a 100 car train or 2 lbs a car implies a 150 car train. I'd sure like to see that.

It seems as though there's still some confusion about the total weight of the train versus the tractive force necessary to move it, or to lift it up a grade. A real-life unit train with a total train weight of 14,000 tons does not require couplers on the engine that can withstand a load of 14,000 tons (28,000,000 pounds). In fact the knuckles will fail at around 500,000 pounds (or about 650,000 with the heaviest modern design, as I think I have recently read in a Trains magazine article), which is only a small fraction of total train weight for the hypothetical 14,000 ton example.

"All I have up so far & that's in the planning pretty much is 5 tracks on a 40' section of my north basement wall. You know that planning can be 1/2 the enjoyment sometimes. '

 

  Hi Alan, Yeah I'm still planning my new layout even as I build the benchwork and install the backdrops. I'm even not yet sure if it will be S scale or HO scale but I'll have to decide soon I guess. Even though most O stuff will run around 46 inch or tighter curves I'd still try to keep the curves as broad as you can for appearance. Unless you are running large steam I don't see much reason to go larger than about 60 inch radius. At 60 inch the trains look nice and a turn back curve still takes up 10 feet of width. Your 50 inch radius choice seems about right to me for a diesel powered layout....DaveB 

Originally Posted by daveb:

"All I have up so far & that's in the planning pretty much is 5 tracks on a 40' section of my north basement wall. You know that planning can be 1/2 the enjoyment sometimes. '

 

  Hi Alan, Yeah I'm still planning my new layout even as I build the benchwork and install the backdrops. I'm even not yet sure if it will be S scale or HO scale but I'll have to decide soon I guess. Even though most O stuff will run around 46 inch or tighter curves I'd still try to keep the curves as broad as you can for appearance. Unless you are running large steam I don't see much reason to go larger than about 60 inch radius. At 60 inch the trains look nice and a turn back curve still takes up 10 feet of width. Your 50 inch radius choice seems about right to me for a diesel powered layout....DaveB 

 

Dave,what switched you from O scale to S or possibly HO? I'm just curious as I got the same problem. 1 day I'm O the next HO & it's just back & forth. I've completed 30 years in HO,have about all I need as far as rolling stock,though I'm thinning that stock out as I started modeling the late B&O/C&O era,which merged into Chessie which is now CSX. I bought for each era accordingly,so have a lot of things to try to get rid of. Track I think I'll buy Shinohara/Walthers turnouts,&maybe DCC for control,but have a $1400 new in box Foreground sound & power system, I'm thinking about installing as the resale is not there for that. Sergent safety shelf couplers will replace Kadee. These work GREAT!! The only thing available in an older type coupler style is available from Protocraft,in O scale,but they're design is very old & no safety shelf couplers are available & probably never will be as the manufacturer doesn't think the investment is worth it as according to him,modern era O scalers only account for 5% of the O scale market. Since my sale of HO has to fund my O scale,I think it might be faster & a better choice to sell my O scale even though it's diesel era. About everything's available in HO where O scale's a much smaller market especially in the diesel era. If I were modeling in the B&O/C&O era,I'd be in good shape,but my era in CSX just isn't there in o scale.

I'd go HO for the availability of products,I think,as I'm leaning more that way. I must have close to 5 grand in rolling stock & used flextrack & a couple of Atlas switches in O scale now.

Whatever scale we end up in,I've come to the conclusion,whatever the size,they're trains & to be enjoyed.

Thank you,

Al Hummel

 

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