Hi All,
I have been spending a lot of time checking which tags in the steam section of e-spec actually affect the performance of the loco.
Some things I found are quite the opposite to what has been posted as a fix, especially for noisy safety valves blowing off.
It has been said that if your safeties are blowing let the coal burn down and keep it at a low percentage.
This does absolutely nothing to cut down the steam generated by the boiler or reduce the blowing off.
Coal fed to the fire is totally window dressing and does nothing to control the amount of steam generated by the boiler.
Three tags that do most of the control for steam are 1. firebox-heating-surface-area. 2. max-fire-temperature. 3. min-fire-temperature.
These three tags have to be able to supply enough steam to keep the boiler up to near operating pressure but not over operating pressure.
So if your loco is continually blowing the safeties these are the tags to change first, however if reasonable changes do not produce the desired affect you should also look at the boiler-efficiency, boiler-efficiency-idle and boiler-efficiency-min tags. Depending on where your loco gains pressure. If it gains pressure doing heavy work it will be the boiler-efficiency, if it gains pressure when stationary it will be the boiler-efficiency-idle and if it gains pressure all the time it will be boiler-efficiency-min.
Reduce the relative tag gradually, only by about 0.1 between each test.
Another problem I found is the steam-chest-max-flow tag, according to the Trainz Dev Wiki this should be about 200 for a medium size loco, I find this too high.
If it is too high you will find it difficult to accelerate when you start off, it tends to bog down the loco and you will have to reduce the regulator and possibly the cutoff to get the loco going. I would suggest 150 to 180 for a medium size loco but remember the steam used here will also affect the safety valves, steam generated has to be balanced with steam used.
Have fun,
Bill69
I have been spending a lot of time checking which tags in the steam section of e-spec actually affect the performance of the loco.
Some things I found are quite the opposite to what has been posted as a fix, especially for noisy safety valves blowing off.
It has been said that if your safeties are blowing let the coal burn down and keep it at a low percentage.
This does absolutely nothing to cut down the steam generated by the boiler or reduce the blowing off.
Coal fed to the fire is totally window dressing and does nothing to control the amount of steam generated by the boiler.
Three tags that do most of the control for steam are 1. firebox-heating-surface-area. 2. max-fire-temperature. 3. min-fire-temperature.
These three tags have to be able to supply enough steam to keep the boiler up to near operating pressure but not over operating pressure.
So if your loco is continually blowing the safeties these are the tags to change first, however if reasonable changes do not produce the desired affect you should also look at the boiler-efficiency, boiler-efficiency-idle and boiler-efficiency-min tags. Depending on where your loco gains pressure. If it gains pressure doing heavy work it will be the boiler-efficiency, if it gains pressure when stationary it will be the boiler-efficiency-idle and if it gains pressure all the time it will be boiler-efficiency-min.
Reduce the relative tag gradually, only by about 0.1 between each test.
Another problem I found is the steam-chest-max-flow tag, according to the Trainz Dev Wiki this should be about 200 for a medium size loco, I find this too high.
If it is too high you will find it difficult to accelerate when you start off, it tends to bog down the loco and you will have to reduce the regulator and possibly the cutoff to get the loco going. I would suggest 150 to 180 for a medium size loco but remember the steam used here will also affect the safety valves, steam generated has to be balanced with steam used.
Have fun,
Bill69