Hi,
SDtrains wrote:The loco does have the punch to do this, but you have to drive within the envelope, and it does seem to be a bit slow.
Many thanks for your reply!
It could be that, due to outside influences, MSTS behaves slightly differently on different PCs. Using the proscribed loco (33029), I could only get to 1.1 miles from the next signal when I came to a stop; regulator was between 92% and 100%, cutoff at 75% and sanders on. This was just holding the train stationary and any reduction in either caused it to roll back; it wasn't due to lack of boiler pressure as that was over 200 psi, due to my constant juggling of regulator and cutoff.
MikeandDi wrote:I tried substituting Eastleigh 33020 following your lead, but still got stuck in the tunnel.
My only run with an Eastleigh loco was with the same one, with which I managed to complete the activity. This is why I compared the eng files of both locos and found the differences.
I suggest you try with 33020 again! The most important thing is to keep the Boiler Pressure up by making sure the Steam Generation Rate is higher than the Steam Usage Rate for as much time as possible - you can't necessarily while filling the boiler with water! This involves 'playing' with the Regulator and Cutoff (Reverser) all the time. The lowest speed I had with 33020 was 2 mph whereas the lowest with a modified 33029 was 0.5 mph! This would imply there are other differences between the two, like weight (Mass).
However, I did enjoy the activity - much better than a straight thrash up the main line, with nothing to think about other than speed limits
Cheers,
Ged
Intel i5-4690K (3.5Ghz), Gigabyte GA-Z97P-D3 m/b, 12GB DDR3 RAM, NVIDIA GTX 750ti (2GB) graphics card, Asus Xonar DS sound card. Win 10 Pro 64-bit.