Changing power

 I had grandiose plans to change locomotives and cabooses on trains passing Littlerock yard. I  decaled a fleet of cabooses with different division names on them so it would be easy to tell them apart. In any case my YM’s  almost never did this. I’d go into staging after a session and find all the wrong cabooses and engines. It wasn’t like they didn’t know. 

It was a nuisance, I guess, and it never happened. On Al Daumann’s BR&W layout when I’m running Redding yard I consider the engine change a pain in the ass.

I get it.

Yesterday I posted a question on the OPSIG about changing locomotives and in addition to receiving the best answer I think I’ve ever received from the OPSIG in 20 years, thank you Don Mitchell, I’ve come to the conclusion that I will NOT be changing locomotives out routinely.

I model 1952, and railroads were dieselizing. Some districts were all steam. Some power, steam and diesel,  ran through. The Western Maryland allowed their STEAM power to continue on through on the P&WV, CNJ, and RDG, and vice-versa. It was different at almost every division point. 

By 1952 modern steam power was capable of running much greater distances. For example the N&W let one J Class 4-8-4 run all the way from Norfolk to Cincinnati, so power running through is plausible.

While I’m going to look closely at the yards to see if they can change power and cabooses without too much fuss, it’s doubtful that I will. In the past it didn’t add much to my operation, it because a nuisance to both the crew and me (during staging).

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