bikkuri bahn Posted July 22, 2014 Share Posted July 22, 2014 Related to the recent announcement by Tramway of an HO scale 8600, a bit of vintage prototype footage. Other than a few scenes in Wakamatsu in Kyushu in the beginning, the scenes are on the Gonou Line in Aomori, where these types were used on mixed trains. 4 Link to comment
Nick_Burman Posted July 22, 2014 Share Posted July 22, 2014 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rAEiFnPK5MA On the Hanawa line. Cheers NB 3 Link to comment
cteno4 Posted July 23, 2014 Share Posted July 23, 2014 Very nice old films Thanks Jeff Link to comment
marknewton Posted July 24, 2014 Share Posted July 24, 2014 Good stuff, very inspirational, thanks to both of you. On those nights at work when its quiet I've been looking at photos and videos that show the whole train so I can draw up lists of typical train consists. These will both be useful for that. All the best, Mark. Link to comment
westfalen Posted July 24, 2014 Share Posted July 24, 2014 I've noticed from this and other videos that mixed trains were common in Japan. I wonder if they ran to as precise a schedule as everything else or if, like ours, they were subject to the vagaries of how much shunting was to be done enroute. Was there a Japanese equivalent to Queensland Railway's notation in many columns of its timetable, "subject to cancellation or alteration without notice". Link to comment
bikkuri bahn Posted July 24, 2014 Author Share Posted July 24, 2014 The mixed trains (called kongou ressha) were scheduled just the same as the passenger trains (and the freights for that matter), they were given appropriate pathings in the daiya. In order to provide time for shunting, station stops were long (i.e. lots of padding). I've listened to recordings of in-train announcments of mixed trains, and the station arrival times are announced without qualification just the same as if it was a regular passenger train (which makes sense, as the passengers relied on these trains to make connections). 1 Link to comment
westfalen Posted July 24, 2014 Share Posted July 24, 2014 The mixed trains (called kongou ressha) were scheduled just the same as the passenger trains (and the freights for that matter), they were given appropriate pathings in the daiya. In order to provide time for shunting, station stops were long (i.e. lots of padding). I've listened to recordings of in-train announcments of mixed trains, and the station arrival times are announced without qualification just the same as if it was a regular passenger train (which makes sense, as the passengers relied on these trains to make connections). I never really thought that would be anything but the case in Japan. Link to comment
Nick_Burman Posted July 25, 2014 Share Posted July 25, 2014 The mixed trains (called kongou ressha) were scheduled just the same as the passenger trains (and the freights for that matter), they were given appropriate pathings in the daiya. In order to provide time for shunting, station stops were long (i.e. lots of padding). I've listened to recordings of in-train announcments of mixed trains, and the station arrival times are announced without qualification just the same as if it was a regular passenger train (which makes sense, as the passengers relied on these trains to make connections). One thing I haven't understood is how these mixed trains coped with fluctuations in the freight traffic - if a train had 45min allocated to do switching at a particular station and the crew found itself confronted with more switching that the time permitted, what did they do...aborted the operation half-way and departed with whatever cars could be gathered during the period? Cheers NB 1 Link to comment
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