Installer Steam
connexion
|
langue
简体中文 (chinois simplifié)
繁體中文 (chinois traditionnel)
日本語 (japonais)
한국어 (coréen)
ไทย (thaï)
Български (bulgare)
Čeština (tchèque)
Dansk (danois)
Deutsch (allemand)
English (anglais)
Español - España (espagnol castillan)
Español - Latinoamérica (espagnol d'Amérique latine)
Ελληνικά (grec)
Italiano (italien)
Bahasa Indonesia (indonésien)
Magyar (hongrois)
Nederlands (néerlandais)
Norsk (norvégien)
Polski (polonais)
Português (portugais du Portugal)
Português - Brasil (portugais du Brésil)
Română (roumain)
Русский (russe)
Suomi (finnois)
Svenska (suédois)
Türkçe (turc)
Tiếng Việt (vietnamien)
Українська (ukrainien)
Signaler un problème de traduction
Thanks for the information. I will keep this in mind for my future videos. Although I normally use locomotive-hauled trains like the Class 60 and the Class 92 that have independent controls. But I am keeping to time a bit better in the next video that will be the Class 165 from Birmingham Snow Hill to London Marylebone. Although somehow I do arrive 10 minutes early into London Marylebone :).
Kind Regards
Ash.
I personally find notch 2 on the original Thompson 455 to be a good braking rate on the British mainline and use it as a reference. This translates to approx -38% throttle on the Class 170.
On flat ground, these are my reference distances:
100mph needs 1 mile
74mph = 0.55mi
57mph = 0.35 mi
47mph = 0.25 mi
30mph = 0.12 mi
I hope you find this helpful in your trainsimming ventures. :)