Author Topic: Trains of all sorts ...  (Read 19631 times)

Offline Weaver

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Trains of all sorts ...
« on: May 02, 2013, 07:32:36 PM »
There seem to have been a lot of armoured train models around in various scales in the last few years, so this article from Dark Roasted Blend seems timely. It's certainly interesting:

http://www.darkroastedblend.com/2013/05/awesome-armoured-trains-and-rail.html
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Offline Dr. YoKai

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #1 on: May 02, 2013, 10:23:08 PM »
I love land battleships in whatever incarnation they appear, and have been prfoundly tempted by
some of the recent sets of armored trains out of Russia...but most of the images from DRB are
new to me. Wonderful stuff! ( man, they got a lot of use out of the T-28 turrets...)

Offline raafif

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #2 on: May 03, 2013, 08:57:19 AM »
Hmm, DRB has only added 3 new pics on that page since I visited last year :(

Here's a couple ...

mainly Russian http://semboyan35.com/archive/index.php/thread-916-1.html
Even tho they don't look it, the Russian ICBM launcher-train is armoured behind the skin.

Flak-wagons of the Romney, Hythe & Dimchurch miniture railway
http://www.rhdr.org.uk/pages/history.html



Also the Serbian Krajina Express - http://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=sr&u=http://oklop2.tripod.com/voz/krajina_ekspres.HTM&prev=/search%3Fq%3Dkrajina%2Bexpress%26start%3D10%26sa%3DN%26biw%3D800%26bih%3D403
photos are not linked but are still on the internet host.
« Last Edit: May 03, 2013, 09:04:36 AM by raafif »

Offline raafif

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #3 on: May 03, 2013, 09:01:45 AM »
here's just a few from my collection .....

Hairy Mary - Boer War, "armoured" with thick rope, it was impervious to rifle & mg bullets.

and two Sth. African rail-motors ....

Offline Weaver

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« Last Edit: May 03, 2013, 09:48:35 AM by Weaver »
"I have described nothing but what I saw myself, or learned from others" - Thucydides

"I've jazzed mine up a bit" - Spike Milligan

"I'm a general specialist," - Harry Purvis in Tales from the White Hart by Arthur C. Clarke

Twitter: @hws5mp
Minds.com: @HaroldWeaverSmith

Offline raafif

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #5 on: May 03, 2013, 12:49:05 PM »
DoH !! yes I forgot that the translator drops the pics :-[

a few more ..... 1960's Russian train with JS-3 turrets now in a museum & a British Wickam rail-car in Malasia.

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #6 on: May 03, 2013, 06:09:57 PM »
this must be the first example of a missile fired from a train?,now being considered again i believe?




cheers Don

Offline elmayerle

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #7 on: May 04, 2013, 12:56:33 AM »
*snicker* back when the US was considering a rail-mobile ICBM, we joked about hiding it by putting the Launch Control Car and three missile cars on the back of an Amtrak long-distance passenger train and giving the Soviets a timetable - they'd never find them.

Speaking of modern armored trains, how about one for costal defense including some GLCM launchers firing anti-ship variants and with CIWS defenses for protection?

Offline perttime

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #8 on: May 04, 2013, 01:04:50 AM »
How do you plan to protect the tracks in the coastal defence system?

Here's a site on Finnish armoured trains 1918 to 1944 (in English):
http://www.jaegerplatoon.net/TRAINS0.htm
« Last Edit: May 04, 2013, 01:11:14 AM by perttime »

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #9 on: May 04, 2013, 03:32:11 AM »
this must be the first example of a missile fired from a train?,now being considered again i believe?




cheers Don


Was it actually launched from that position?  Do you have more details?
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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #10 on: May 04, 2013, 03:32:38 AM »
What would you do for a modern 21st century armoured train?
All hail the God of Frustration!!!

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Offline perttime

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #11 on: May 04, 2013, 04:01:24 AM »
Make it independent of tracks. Tracks are an easy target nowadays.




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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #12 on: May 04, 2013, 04:14:53 AM »
I like your thinking.  Maybe have good Air defence systems on board...maybe something like the Pantsir-S1 (see below) on one "module" or even a VLS SAM system?



All hail the God of Frustration!!!

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Offline Dr. YoKai

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #13 on: May 04, 2013, 04:21:06 AM »
 Two or three of the linked Terracruisers ( from the recently re-issued Mace kit ) might be a good
 base - likewise, for a Post-apocolyptic Mad Max world, well, I think some of my colleagues are
 familiar with 'road trains', no?

 But that strays a bit...under what circumstances would the armored train be viable in today's world?
 I could see it being useful in a Totalitarian country that still had problems with Revolution and
 insurgency. MGs/grenade launchers would probably be the bulk of the armament, with some light
 artillery for the intimidation factor.

 Alternately, taking the 'mobile missile' tack mentioned above, if you're putting your ICBMs on a rail
 platform, why not add ABMs & lasers, and pull the whole thing with a nuclear locomotive?

Offline jcf

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #14 on: May 04, 2013, 05:07:18 AM »
What would you do for a modern 21st century armoured train?

Eliminate airplanes and helicopters.  ;D
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Sense doesn’t come into it. People are
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actually is than they ever are about
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Offline Weaver

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #15 on: May 04, 2013, 05:35:50 AM »
Well the Krajina Express was only viable because the opposition had no significant air power and apparently couldn't bring heavy weapons to bear on it. The Serbs had another, smaller armoured train that got ambushed by Bosnians with a T-55 tank and that was the end of it. This suggests to me that the likeliest scenario for a "modern" (1960s onwards) armoured train would be counter-insurgency. Perhaps you might get a situation where logistics had to go along a railway, and the armoured train fulfilled the same role as the convoy-escort gun-trucks seen from Vietnam to Iraq.

Imagine this: a big country gets involved in a counter-insurgency campaign in a small country. The only route from the only port to the combat zone passes through an area of precipitous wooded mountains. The only roads through this area are narrow, crumbling, dangerous and vulnerable. Helicopters can't carry the sheer volumes of stuff neccessary, and it's impossible to build a landing strip at the destination. The only way through this area is a colonial-era railroad, driven through at enormous cost in blood and treasure in the 19th century. The Insurgents are as aware of these factors as the Army, and are determined to disrupt railways operations by any means possible, but the same factors that force the Army to use the railway also mean that the Insurgents can only bring to the party what they can carry: small arms, explosives and hand-tools.

As has been rightly pointed out, the biggest problem in armoured train operations is not protecting the train but protecting the track. The location of the track is fixed and known and it's impossible to physically prevent access along it's hundreds of miles. Insurgents could rip the track up or block it hours before the train arrives and contrive to trap it by blocking the rail miles behind where it stops. However this cuts both ways. The location of the track is known to the Army as well, and the insurgents have to come out of the cover of the forests and remain in a fixed location to work on it. This means that the Army can dissuade or prevent many attempts by patrolling the track, using aircraft/helicopters/UAVs according to era and preference.

The Army has large resources to bring to bear for arming and armouring the trains, but one thing it can't do, at least in the initial stages of the campaign, is choose the trains themselves. Importing a modern loco wolud be hugely expensive and difficult and if the campaign is initially expected to be short and sharp, then there may be a reluctance to commit to such a long-term investment for several years. This means that the train is likely to be, at best, a 1950s vintage item, imported second-hand from Europe in the 1960s and maintained to a variable standard ever since.

For armament against Insurgent attacks, one thing that immediately strikes me as useful for both it's lethality and it's psychological impact is the minigun. The normal objection to Gatling guns for ground use is that they waste ammunition and over-kill a point instead of covering and area. However, a train carriage has more space and weight capacity than any AFV, so it could easily carry a useful amount of ammo and could even be equipped with a small generator to power the guns and make them independent of batteries.
"I have described nothing but what I saw myself, or learned from others" - Thucydides

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Offline ysi_maniac

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #16 on: May 04, 2013, 08:42:43 PM »
I like your thinking.  Maybe have good Air defence systems on board...maybe something like the Pantsir-S1 (see below) on one "module" or even a VLS SAM system?



Love this, really!!!

Offline Old Wombat

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #17 on: May 04, 2013, 11:04:45 PM »
Weav, UAV's would be your best rail-line defense, these days, (arm them with airburst anti-personnel missiles) under most circumstances but nothing is going to provide perfect coverage. High winds, storms, fog... They'll all play a part in letting the insurgents set remote detonated explosive devices... or, even, pressure-switch devices (my father told me about the Czech resistance occasionally using pressure switches set x metres ahead of their explosives, near the end of WW2, so they blew up the engine, rather than the rock-filled flat-car ahead of the train).

Still, intensive patrolling of, & the use of special forces troops around the line could limit even those opportunities (but that's still a win for the insurgents, removing troops from the "front lines").

 :)

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Offline Weaver

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #18 on: May 05, 2013, 12:32:34 AM »
Weav, UAV's would be your best rail-line defense, these days, (arm them with airburst anti-personnel missiles) under most circumstances but nothing is going to provide perfect coverage. High winds, storms, fog... They'll all play a part in letting the insurgents set remote detonated explosive devices... or, even, pressure-switch devices (my father told me about the Czech resistance occasionally using pressure switches set x metres ahead of their explosives, near the end of WW2, so they blew up the engine, rather than the rock-filled flat-car ahead of the train).

Still, intensive patrolling of, & the use of special forces troops around the line could limit even those opportunities (but that's still a win for the insurgents, removing troops from the "front lines").

 :)

Guy

Indeed, although I was allowing a definition of "modern" that was essentially "post WWII", so it might be set in the days before UAVs were common or effective. For those situations, I'm thinking a FAC-style light aircraft would be more cost effective than a helo IF you can find landing strips for it where it needs them. If you can't then helo it is.

If it is set in ultra-modern times, you might even have the UAV controller on-board the train.....

One way to deal with clever bombers would be to sweep ahead of the freight train with an independent "scout" train that consisted of two separate, self-powered vehicles (rail tanks, essentially) each with a sacrificial wagon ahead of it but with a variable gap between them. That way, even a bomb detonated by a trailing pressure switch is highly unlikely to get both of them, an the other can raise the alarm. The problem then would be that if the scout was knocked out by direct attack, it could become a barrier to the main train in itself, so it shouldn't be too precious to be unceremoniously pushed out of the way if neccessary.
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"I've jazzed mine up a bit" - Spike Milligan

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Offline jcf

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #19 on: May 05, 2013, 02:11:20 AM »
Up here on Puget Sound you don't need insurgents to take out the tracks, the earth does it for you.  ;D

http://www.king5.com/news/local/Train-engineers-hope-to-reduce-landslides-for-North-Sounder-line-193916181.html

Geology, geography, weather and climate are things to factor into an armoured train scenario.
“Conspiracy theory’s got to be simple.
Sense doesn’t come into it. People are
more scared of how complicated shit
actually is than they ever are about
whatever’s supposed to be behind the
conspiracy.”
-The Peripheral, William Gibson 2014

Offline Weaver

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #20 on: May 05, 2013, 02:22:12 AM »
Fair comment, and particularly in the "extreme mountain" scenario I outlined. After all, if the roads are problematic, then railways are almost certain to have many of the same problems. For the scenario to come true, I think you've have to presume that the Victorian engineers who built the railway were aware of the issues and did major engineering work around the track to protect it to an extent, but they probably didn't get everything right, and with over a hundred years of wear and tear and change, yes, I'm sure there'd be problems.
"I have described nothing but what I saw myself, or learned from others" - Thucydides

"I've jazzed mine up a bit" - Spike Milligan

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Offline Rickshaw

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #21 on: May 05, 2013, 10:53:45 AM »
The usefulness of the Armoured Train varied depending upon conditions, rather than necessarily any set period.   For patrolling rail lines, their still useful today, as long as the insurgents only have limited access to heavy weapons and explosives.  In Europe and North America, their heyday was the late 19th century.  In Russia and Asia, up until about the 1930s.  In Africa, as late as the 1960s.  South America more than likely the 1950s.   After those periods, their limits and their vulnerabilities limit their tactic usefullness.

Interestingly, in Malaysia, the British were using modified Ferret scout cars to patrol the narrow gauge rail lines until the 1960s and the ARVN were doing the same with modified Daimler scout carts in South Vietnam.

Offline raafif

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #22 on: May 05, 2013, 11:25:09 AM »
The location of the track is fixed and known

who says ?  see pic below ;D ....






but then there's always E-boats & subs to sink it ....

Offline Story

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #23 on: June 21, 2017, 04:46:49 AM »
« Last Edit: June 21, 2017, 04:50:11 AM by Story »

Offline GTX_Admin

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #24 on: June 21, 2017, 03:43:00 PM »
 :) ;D
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Offline M.A.D

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #25 on: July 15, 2017, 06:16:14 AM »
this must be the first example of a missile fired from a train?,now being considered again i believe?




cheers Don


So is this German, or a Soviet adoption/concept of deploying a V-2?

M.A.D

Offline jcf

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #26 on: April 02, 2020, 06:50:57 AM »
I'll merge the Armoured Train thread into this one later.

ATSF experimental concept from the late '60s - early '70s, the coaxial train.
Deck only 24" above the top of the rail, individually powered 16" modular wheel
assemblies on 4' centres. I'll post the rest of the details later.



“Conspiracy theory’s got to be simple.
Sense doesn’t come into it. People are
more scared of how complicated shit
actually is than they ever are about
whatever’s supposed to be behind the
conspiracy.”
-The Peripheral, William Gibson 2014

Offline apophenia

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #27 on: April 02, 2020, 09:11:31 AM »
Low-profile and all-powered wheels - very cool  :smiley:
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Offline jcf

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #28 on: April 03, 2020, 09:39:55 AM »
The full text of the article after OCR and cleanup:

"Eighteenth century mine waggons slowly evolved into 1970's freight cars.
Like dinosaurs, these cars have become too big, too heavy and too clumsy.
But are such units the only practical way to move freight along a railroad?
Santa Fe researchers pondered this. The result of their pondering and
experimentation is a 12-flanged-wheel centipede known as the 'coaxial train',
which now exists as a 1/8-scale model in the R&D laboratory at Topeka, Kan.
It is predicated on the realization that U.S. railroads will be forced to make do
with conventional - if improved - track, and on presently existing routes.

Says Railway Age: 'The Santa Fe design had to provide:
-A lowered center of gravity,
-Minimum wind resistance,
-An alternative to standard, rigid axles, to cut down on rail and wheelwear
 on curves,
-Improved weight distribution,
-Modular construction, to permit maintenance to make quick repairs/parts
 replacements,
-A smoother ride, through elimination of slack action,
-Power distribution evenly throughout the train, for smooth acceleration,
-A redesigned braking system.'


The coaxial train would have a diesel powered electric generator car at the head
end, whose power would be distributed to small motors on each individual wheel
in the train. The design does not incorporate such traditional devices as brake shoes,
couplers, draft gear, slack adjusters or (in the normal sense) truck side frames and
bolsters.

Coaxial trains would be built to predetermined lengths. Each train would have one
continuous center sill, which would flex around curves and still have ample strength
to support very heavy loads. Santa Fe points out that the feasibilityof the laterally-flexible
center sill has been proved in operation of welded-rail trains, in which 1440-foot rail
strings bend around curves and create no derailment problems.

The main deck of the coaxial train would be just 24 inches above top of rail.
The designers have packed a lot of hardware into that two-foot space. First, there
are the modular wheel assemblies, using wheel approximately 16 inches in diameter.
Assemblies are spaced about four feet apart. A wheel deck, fastened to the flexible
center beam, is provided for each opposing pair of wheels. No axles are used and
each wheel has its own knee-action, enabling it to stay right with the rail, no matter
how rough or curving the track. Between the wheel deck and the main deck are plastic
cushioning tubes which run longitudinally on each side of the train. These tough,
liquid-filled tubes would effectively distribute any bump on one side to all other wheels
on that side. Above the wheel decks is the main deck. This can be varied in length, but
in a prototype, it would probably be designed to handle a 40-foot container. Support
between the wheel decks and the main deck is "provided by rollers, spaced four to
each wheel deck. The main deck is fastened to the flexible center beam at only two
points, approximately one-fourth of the deck length in from each end. This two point
fastening and the angling of the support rollers toward the two points would permit the
deck to 'float' around curves.

Top speed? ATSF says 'over 100 mph.' And braking 'would be fully dynamic, with
uniform brake application, through either electrical or hydraulic systems.' Although this
Santa Re idea is supposed to be primarily concerned with container traffic, a similiar
concept might be able to carry enormous loads of bulk traffic at high speeds and still
be easy on equipment, track and costs."


Cheers  :thumbsup:
“Conspiracy theory’s got to be simple.
Sense doesn’t come into it. People are
more scared of how complicated shit
actually is than they ever are about
whatever’s supposed to be behind the
conspiracy.”
-The Peripheral, William Gibson 2014

Offline apophenia

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #29 on: April 04, 2020, 06:44:52 AM »
Thanks for the OCR/cleanup, Jon  :smiley:

One review of the coaxial train concept said that it failed in its economics. I'm guessing that this economic assessment didn't take into account potential savings based on reduced rail/bed wear (better weight distribution, more uniform braking, etc.) or happier customers (lower decks = potentially quicker load handling, smoother ride = less cargo jostling/damage, high speed = faster delivery, etc.).

As the article says: "high speeds and still ... easy on equipment, track and costs."

No mention of regenerative braking, I note, but I bet that would have come later  :smiley:
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Offline M.A.D

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #30 on: April 10, 2020, 01:37:45 PM »
I like your thinking.  Maybe have good Air defence systems on board...maybe something like the Pantsir-S1 (see below) on one "module" or even a VLS SAM system?



Love this, really!!!


Yes, I think the Pantsir would be an ideal duel-purpose weapons system for an combat train - effective in both air defence and suppression of ground assault!!

M.A.D

Offline GTX_Admin

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #31 on: April 21, 2020, 04:10:26 AM »
Something to deal with those pesky armoured trains:  Soviet ZhDT-3 rail torpedo:



https://weaponsandwarfare.com/2017/03/02/soviet-zhdt-3-rail-torpedo/
All hail the God of Frustration!!!

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Offline elmayerle

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #32 on: April 25, 2020, 10:05:12 AM »
Just a bit of mixed whiffery, here - the Southern Pacific Railroad had a number of cab-forward 4-8-8-2 articulated steam locomotive for going through their long tunnels and snow sheds without impairing the crew.  These engines had flat or, on later ones, slightly rounded fronts.  The Pennsylvania Railroad learned from an accident involving a box-cab P-5a electric locomotive that this is not a good thing; the accident lead to a re-design, "Modified P-5a", that greatly influenced the design of the GG-1 locomotives.  My thought is what if the SP worked with the builder of these "AC series" articulated locomotives to add a streamlined front end that added some "crush depth"?  I could see the builder, Baldwin, using the contours of their diesel-electric locomotives, especially their distinctive "shark nose" ones, to accomplish this.

I could see the result in two color schemes, one the standard steam locomotive scheme for the SP, the other the color scheme used for their Coast Daylight passenger trains between San Francisco and LA.

Offline elmayerle

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #33 on: September 13, 2020, 11:06:59 PM »
If one should happen to have a spare set of jet engine nacelles from a B-36, you'd have to scratchbuild the modified Budd RDC, but here is

More about it at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M-497_Black_Beetle.  Pictures of it in action show quite the "rooster tail" of dust behind it.

Offline M.A.D

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #34 on: September 17, 2020, 05:26:06 PM »
On the subject of trains, which I by my own admission know next to nothing about, I'm wondering if the Germans ever considered designing and manufacturing variants of their locomotives and rolling stock to suit the gauge of Russian railway network? Or would it have been feasible to have a multi-gague bogy [I think that's what the coin railway wheels 😬] arrangement... Compared to the time, effort and resources to replace Russian railway to suit German locomotives and rolling stock has always baffled me. After all it wasn't like the German's never new that they weren't going to invade Russia.....


MAD

Offline ChalkLine

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #35 on: January 06, 2021, 04:35:19 PM »
Here's a Balkan's War train.

Offline GTX_Admin

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #36 on: January 07, 2021, 02:02:03 AM »
Interesting.  Are there any more details?
All hail the God of Frustration!!!

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But you can make the Bastard work for it.

Offline raafif

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #37 on: February 24, 2022, 07:39:15 AM »
a couple of strange ones I've found ...

Offline raafif

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #38 on: February 24, 2022, 07:41:04 AM »
this one from the film Gizmo always gets me :D  Somehow it does make a lot of sense for a tram to overtake on the same track - it saves a lot in infrastructure.

Offline raafif

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #39 on: February 24, 2022, 01:19:35 PM »
They keep going on about renewable energy so here's a couple ... ;D

Offline raafif

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #40 on: February 27, 2022, 01:00:07 PM »
a few from Australia ... that New York Stepless is SEXY (only two imported).

Offline Story

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Offline Old Wombat

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #42 on: March 09, 2022, 05:03:55 PM »
Pulled out some old WW2 rolling stock & gave it a light make-over, did they? ???
"This is the Captain. We have a little problem with our engine sequence, so we may experience some slight turbulence and, ah, explode."

Offline perttime

  • The man has produced a Finnish Napier Heston Fighter...need we say more?
Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #43 on: March 09, 2022, 06:44:53 PM »
The guy looks a bit awkward there: just posing on the double 23mm gun.

Offline Story

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #44 on: March 11, 2022, 11:33:50 PM »
Take the last train to Odessa
and I'll meet you at the station
with an NLaw in my hand

http://charly015.blogspot.com/2020/02/shoigu-cancela-la-orden-de-eliminar-los.html


Offline Story

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #45 on: March 11, 2022, 11:36:25 PM »
The guy looks a bit awkward there: just posing on the double 23mm gun.

The gun is probably older than him.

We had a 14.5 KPV twin on our FOB that was abandoned by the IAF and I, being the Good Idea Fairy, Jedi mind tricked the boss into mounting it on top of a concrete "SCUD Bunker" block and sandbagged.  It faced the main gate, t'was our little Potemkin Gun.

True story.

Offline kim margosein

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #46 on: March 12, 2022, 12:17:40 PM »
Wonder how soon Zvezda will have a model of it out?   I suppose a Tom Courtney figure is out of the question.

Offline perttime

  • The man has produced a Finnish Napier Heston Fighter...need we say more?
Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #47 on: March 12, 2022, 02:16:14 PM »
The guy looks a bit awkward there: just posing on the double 23mm gun.

The gun is probably older than him.

We had a 14.5 KPV twin on our FOB that was abandoned by the IAF and I, being the Good Idea Fairy, Jedi mind tricked the boss into mounting it on top of a concrete "SCUD Bunker" block and sandbagged.  It faced the main gate, t'was our little Potemkin Gun.

True story.
Quite likely the gun is old. It looks like it is quite functional, despite the hideous paint of the mount. ZU-23 isn't a bad gun. It can be quite effective against soft ground targets, even with very basic sights, and with upgraded targeting equipment it will do against slow moving aircraft.

My earliest memories of it are consripts training on it in 60s and 70s. And then there's the time in 1997 when we saw three of them being towed in the Croatian town of Vinkovci. UN forces in Croatia were on edge for a while when we reported them.

Offline GTX_Admin

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #48 on: March 13, 2022, 01:27:05 AM »
First the fictional:



Now the real world:



More: http://mikes.railhistory.railfan.net/r069.html
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Offline GTX_Admin

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All hail the God of Frustration!!!

You can't outrun Death forever.
But you can make the Bastard work for it.

Offline GTX_Admin

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #50 on: March 13, 2022, 01:44:37 AM »
Potentialling interesting site:  https://railwaywondersoftheworld.com/index.html
All hail the God of Frustration!!!

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But you can make the Bastard work for it.

Offline M.A.D

  • Also likes a bit of arse...
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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #51 on: December 09, 2022, 06:46:58 AM »
Fortress On Wheels: Russia Flaunts Its Heavy-Duty Armored Train Used For Critical Military Missions In Ukraine

https://eurasiantimes.com/fortress-on-wheels-russia-flaunts-its-heavy-duty-armored-train-used-for-critical-military-missions-in-ukraine/


MAD

Offline GTX_Admin

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All hail the God of Frustration!!!

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Offline Marderman

  • Guess what he builds lots of...
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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #53 on: November 28, 2023, 05:02:45 PM »
IMG_5887 by Diethelm Berlage, auf Flickr

IMG_5888 by Diethelm Berlage, auf Flickr


Offline Frank3k

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Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #54 on: November 28, 2023, 11:46:40 PM »
They used that rail bulldog to pull a locomotive? Wow.

Offline perttime

  • The man has produced a Finnish Napier Heston Fighter...need we say more?
Re: Trains of all sorts ...
« Reply #55 on: November 29, 2023, 01:10:57 AM »
So... the Lanz Bulldog engine was originally (?) meant for tractors. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lanz_Bulldog

Looks like the advantage on Feldbahn (narrow gauge railways), compared with steam locomotives, was that you could start it faster and operate it without a crew.