To some of you, I bet this will be pretty basic!
I have 2 questions about some things I saw recently watching YouTubes of steam engines in operation:
(1) The train will be in motion, and a nominal amount of gray smoke will be coming out the smokestack. Then, all of a sudden, there will be this brief burst (like a cannon shot, lasting 1-2 seconds) of thick black smoke. Then it will return to the gray smoke. Sometimes it happens again in about 45-60 seconds. What is this?
(2) I saw one of the big Pennsy engines (I think it was a 0-4-4-0) starting up. The rear 2 drive axles were going at normal speed. But the front 2 axles were spinning very fast. What was happening here? Did the rear axles have better traction? Was there more steam to the front cylinders?
Thanks in advance!
-- Russ Schwartz

I have 2 questions about some things I saw recently watching YouTubes of steam engines in operation:
(1) The train will be in motion, and a nominal amount of gray smoke will be coming out the smokestack. Then, all of a sudden, there will be this brief burst (like a cannon shot, lasting 1-2 seconds) of thick black smoke. Then it will return to the gray smoke. Sometimes it happens again in about 45-60 seconds. What is this?
(2) I saw one of the big Pennsy engines (I think it was a 0-4-4-0) starting up. The rear 2 drive axles were going at normal speed. But the front 2 axles were spinning very fast. What was happening here? Did the rear axles have better traction? Was there more steam to the front cylinders?
Thanks in advance!
-- Russ Schwartz