Ever ride in the cab of a Mohawk? When I lived in Columbus many ages ago. The 
NYC let us use one on a passenger excursion.  
 Watched many a train start that way.   That clunking sound carried a long way. 
 It also reduced the spinning of drivers on the loco.

Stay healthy
John Armstrong
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Richard Karnes 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Thursday, September 13, 2012 12:58 PM
  Subject: {S-Scale List} Re: "Annoying slack action"


    

  Jim King wrote:

  "His design permits Kadee centering without the annoying slack action."

  Annoying??  One of my favorite memories is seeing NYC Mohawks (Mountains for 
you non-NYC fans) starting a 100-car train.  The loco would back up about a car 
length, bunching up slack.  Then it would pull forward, ever so slowly, taking 
out the slack car by car.  You could hear the clunk! clunk! clunk! as each 
coupler became fully extended and each car leapt into slow motion.  The 
Mohawks' replacements, Alco FA/FB lash-ups, did the same thing.  Thankfully, 
this is one of the aspects of running trains on my layout that I really enjoy 
-- starting a freight train and listening to the slack take-up as the 
locomotive gradually moved forward.

  Lest you rebut by observing that the Kadee 802/808 centering springs cause 
the caboose to constantly bob longitudinally, I refer you back to my 
oft-repeated (in print as well as via electrons) but little-heeded 
recommendation (supported by Kadee themselves!) to substitute a knuckle spring 
for the too-stiff centering spring.

  Dick Karnes


  

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