Lego 60197 With 10 wagons the train is to have for 1 motor In the last wagon i build a second motor this one is pushing the train #largelegotrain #longestlegotrein #lego60197xxl
@@cnrailfan3473 real railroads would use 2 locomotives either 2 units at the front ot 1 at the front and one in the rear. Very rarely do you see a unit in the middle
@@insomniacbritgaming1632 passenger trains these days are mostly Electric Multiple Units. 3-4 cars permanently stuck together, with steering cabins at both ends, and it’s becoming more and more common to just have motors on All The Places.
When I was a kid the tracks looked the same but back then it was a conductive metal foil on the top of the rails for the power distribution to the trains (one positive and one negative rail). It would be interesting to see a comperision between these two kind of motors.
Im honestly impressed that its pulling that many. My powerfunctions stuff can only do like 5-10 fully loaded cars unless I rig the engine for dual bogie power.
It's much easy to pull in a straight line. Much of the speed is lost once you've reached the apex of the corner. It wouldn't shock me if one motor could have done more in a straight line.
A train with more than roughly 8 carriages needs a freight engine, be it small scale and large scale both, Lego makes no difference. It's more to do with pull resistance and curve resistance than weight, the tracks absorb the weight. Which means the regular train Motor won't cut it, you'll need a XL motor hooked up to a geared drive chain which can handle a lot of weight.
In real life, commuter trainsets usually always have motors in even-number wagons. At my place, the ER22 (the year 1964) is one of the old train sets by RVR that had motors at head wagons only, and that's a problem because their axes were most overloaded. You'll see they going slow, and the motor is heard at the head wagon only: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-7e89toZJ9oA.html. And since ER2, most of the trains have every even wagon has motors, so, this allows the train to accelerate much quicker and reduce the load on connections and axes. So, try to put many motors in the middle of the train set, and you'll see the long train will have good acceleration and won't get broken because of weak connections.
I love this video I have a lego train I just keep getting every time for Christmas and I love it when I can make my train long to I love your train and how much work you put in to that good job my guy
All you need is an Art Deco-inspired steam engine and you essentially get a Snowpiercer. Let's petition Lego to make one! One set to be the locomotive and then another set for the cars. Keep in mind the whole train will be 999 cars, excluding engine and tender.
On a real railway it would stretch some 300 metres in that configuration-anyway the physics show how the load is impacting the motors the same as in real life.
Consider the 24 wagons you have 12 sets. Why not place each second train backwards. So you have the loc, 4 wagons and a loc backwards then repeat with a loc, 4 wagons and a loc backwards and so on. So you have a 36 long train with 12 locs and 24 wagons.
So according to your description, every 11th car you have a second motor? That still means just two motors pulling all this, quite impressive! I don't remember what my record is for pulling stuff (should try this sometime!), but my LEGO cars and locomotives tend to be larger and heavier so I usually run them on aftermarket larger radius curves when I can and put silicon grease on all the axles. The latter really helps, my streamline steamer would nearly come to a stop on standard LEGO curves when pulling just 4 cars there was so much friction! It still slows down a bit, but the bigger concern is the speed going into the curves as it will flip off the track if you hit a normal LEGO turn faster then the fourth speed setting.
Also, i you use rechargable batteries, you only get 1.2v per cell, so for 6 cells, only 7.2v, using Alkaline batteries, that have a nominal voltage of 1.5v, total of 9v for the pack.
Мне больше нравится контент английских и американских блогеров у них всë интересней как у тебя чел ты красава, лучший, молодец продолжай у тебя всë интересно и класно❤😉
@@HuntingPuma378 This train is going quite cheap now. I can get it new for as low as AUD$135 now. I bought my two sets at AUD$155 originally, and that was a drop from AUD$165 previously.
You can make it longer than the original, which had only 2 wagons. >:( 1 more wagon or reversible would have been worth it. Standard is to buy two, but that's exactly why only 2 wagons dck move, so refused. The Lego world still waits for a decent train.