lwhitehead wrote:Well the Wiki tab on that Steam Loco said it was the most powerful and fasted Engine creative, PRR T1 still is my First choice but that Engine you mention might be Second choice.
1: Wikipedia is an unreliable source. The text says "most powerful" but the stats sidebar says less than half the tractive power of a Big Boy. (and less tractive power than both of the others I referenced.)
2: the Wiki and other sources all mention the high maintenance and wheel slippage problems.
3: The 140 MPH speed is hearsay and well beyond the rated top speed of 100 MPH. The SP GS-4 Streamliner have a rated top speed of 110 and probably exceeded that by 10% or so for short spans in ideal circumstances.
lwhitehead wrote:The Firebox, I can't used Nuclear Fuel the Waste would be a problem,
Why not? There are methods for dealing with radioactive waste that are non-problematic. Research "Vitrification" and "reprocessing" of nuclear fuels. The French use vitrification and burial in deep bore-shafts, IIRC. Your engine is going to need periodic overhauls and inspections at a depot level facility; nuclear fuel replacement and handling can be centralized so there's no "waste" problem out on the rails to worry about.
lwhitehead wrote:The first half of the train is were the normal Streamliners cars are and the Second half are the mix of personal cars of the Riders and Train crew as well, the question is how long can I make this train?.
1: The cars should be steam-punk versions of AMTRAK's high-speed passenger cars; i.e. gyro-stabilized cars that bank into turns and offer little air and rolling resistance.
2: Figure out how heavy your cars are and how strong your couplings/draw bars are. Divide the tractive power rating of your engine by the average weight and consider the lowest draw-bar rating (weak draw bars should be at the rear of the train where they don't pull the full weight of the train.)
3: consider your average track condition/type/maintenance. You can pull more weight/cars faster over good rails than you can bad rails.
4: Read up on historic passenger trains. 100 cars was considered a huge freight consist; that was generally slow and ponderous -- about a quarter of passenger speeds. Without looking up actual numbers, the SP Cascade/Shasta Daylights (steam GS-4 streamliners) that ran through my home town in the 50's seemed to be in the fifteen to twenty car range. (Memories 50 years old and post-stroke should be taken with a grain of salt -- look up the numbers.)
5: For a fantasy/SF venue, you can probably double the numbers without getting death threats from steam buffs.
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Answers! I got lots of answers!
(Now if I could just find the right questions.)