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With 2 motors they can have independent chuffing that is in sync with each other at times .
Bob;What is this "transition era" you keep talking about? I haven't heard a manufacturer seriously address that "era" in some time. On the other hand, it keeps my bank account from shrinking... With a smile.Kind regards,Bill
The elephant in the room is that you will likely need 2 sound decoders (at $100+ each) if using virtual cam (motor BEMF), or 2 physical cams if you expect the engines to go out of sync (one engine slipping a but occasionally). I believe that was Bob Gilmore expectation.If a single decoder is used with a sound file for simple articulated engine, then you will still get the uneven beat of 2 steam engines, but they not have that special occasional out-of-sync effect. I'm also not sure how a single decoder driving 2 motors will behave. Theoretically since both shoudl see the same load, it might work, but will it?
@peteski I would be surprised if Kato actually does two motors...as I see no advantage to it other than a separate motor for the front engine would weigh it down, so it would pull like there's no tomorrow! And THAT is a big advantage, which is why I hope they do a version that represents Big Boy as it was while still in service in the 40's and 50's.Cheerio!!Bob Gilmore
And the flywheels are a bigger diameter than the armature so they actually work.
Bob, that is not quite what you mentioned in a post some time ago responding to my post:https://www.therailwire.net/forum/index.php?topic=51931.msg708842#msg708842We had additional discussion later in that thread (basically going over what we are discussing now).The technical drawing in the FB picture linked to earlier clearly shows 2 coreless motors with conical flywheels.Most N scale motors have lots of excess power compared the weight of the loco. The weight of the loco (directly related to its adhesion) will be the limiting factor when it comes to its pulling power (regardless if there is one or two motors). Actually with a single motor, more weight could be added to the boiler, increasing the adhesion. A single motor would still have more than ample power to get the model moving under load. And in single motor design the entire weight of the boiler (motor, ballast weight) rests on the pivot points of both engines. Even if the rear engine was rigidly mounted to the boiler, the weight distribution of 50/50% on both engines could be achieved. Also just to bring in the full history of this announcement, quoting my post from 2021:Kato Big Boy was "officially" announced back in 2019.Earlier that year, there was a Kato poll.https://www.therailwire.net/forum/index.php?topic=46480.msg614895#msg614895 We also had discussions about it in 2020.https://www.therailwire.net/forum/index.php?topic=47418.0https://www.therailwire.net/forum/index.php?topic=50014.msg673739#msg673739And a discussion about possibly a dual-motor mechanism.https://www.therailwire.net/forum/index.php?topic=51931.msg707978#msg707978And another one (unfortunately the image in that post is no longer on Kato website, but it is the same one as the one on FB mentioned earlier in this thread).https://www.therailwire.net/forum/index.php?topic=53596.0
How many Big Boys will the market bear? BLI is releasing theirs early next year, Kato is going to release their model, and Athearn came out with theirs not long ago.Can we get a decent 2-10-x mechanism in N scale, or a nice small switcher? These are two glaring holes in N scale steam that no one seems to want to fill.
tsk tsk read your own post https://www.therailwire.net/forum/index.php?topic=51215.15