Peter2 wrote:n7axw wrote:
Dunno the answers to these questions... but I do know that there was an extensive railroad industry prior to the widespread use of electricity. So they must have figured it out somehow.
Don
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They did, but . . . .
The problem was that every effort to improve safety reduced flow density and so lowered efficiency, and so each effort was countered &/or ignored (to some extent at least) to get efficiency back up again. There were some pretty horrendous accidents, notably Quintinshill. The vast majority were ascribed to human error, but you have to read each individual case to make a judgement on whether the "error" was an outright blunder, or the results of somebody bending the rules.
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A Train Question? Oh be still my beating heart! I am nothing if not a train nut.
Can't say for Great Britain, but here in the states the methodology of using schedule, rule, and train order worked for a great number of railroads for a very long time. And did it, I might point out, on single line tracks, double tracking is not needed. Indeed the Long Island Railroad only abandoned it comparatively recently. While active track control is undoubtedly superior Train Order methodology will work even with only Semaphore to relay train orders up and down the line. Emergencies are dealt with by line squibs (line torpedoes) , signaling lanterns, flagmen, etc. Why do you think train crews once used to be so large? Answer is that they needed an extra hand or two in case they had to flag down approaching trains in an emergency. Well that and the number of brakeman required to brake a train before you had air brakes. In any case a nice discussion on train order methods can be found on Wiki
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Train_order_operationAnd nobody bends rules under Schedule and Order. NOBODY! Best flacking way that I know of to get fired from a railroad. Not to mention beaten within an inch of your life by your fellow railway employees. Everybody knows about the deaths and accidents that resulted in the beginning before strict rule enforcement was in place. And everybody will know you put them and their brother railwaymen at risk by bending rules. The union won't protect you, the railway won't thank you and the feds will hammer your butt for it. Railways live by the train movement rulebook. (See:
http://www.gn-npjointarchive.org/GN_Misc/ccor_1967.pdf all 105 pages of it if you want to see how extensive they could be.)(And every railroad employee would be expected to know all of it to operate on the trains.)
Yes Safehold could do trains without electricity and they could get quite a good volume of traffic, even with only semaphore and train order rules. As many others have pointed out though, the EoC has a need for all the Steel and Iron it can get supporting its current war production needs. AS Chisholm, Emerald, Corisande, Tarot, and Siddarmark get their industrial bases cranking up though, I think that the excess productive capacity will come online to support a rail-line or two. I don't see that happening in the current book series though, much as it breaks my heart to say it. <Sigh>
Larry