Originally Posted by: Janne75 
Hi all,
As I like to run also long trains like 10-15 passenger coaches or sometimes 40+ cars freight trains I’m afraid of doing this with almost any newer design steam locomotives. These have so prototypically correct size side rods etc. that if overloaded by pulling heavy long trains especially on inclined track and traction of the driving wheels ends for a while in the worst situation those side rods can break.
....
I would like to ask you other members who like to run also long and heavy trains have you similar problems with newer design steam locomotives? Many newer design diesel or electric locomotives with central mounted motor and cardan shafts does not have any problems pulling heavy trains. They also weight enough as they have metal loco body. Only steam locomotives have these problems because of very fine details and narrow side rods + the fact that side rods are transfering the power to other driving wheels/axles and not gears.
Cheers,
Janne
Hello Janne and all!
Ah yes!
The ever lasting question!
I was concerned with that myself for a very long time, as I too love to have long and sometimes very "heavy" trains
But no longer!
All it takes is a little bit of physics!
The maximum available traction effort "T" on any given axle of a locomotive is the product of the weight " W" carried by that axle multiplied by the adherence coefficient "K" of the two surfaces in contact.
T = W x K
The important variable here is K. The higher it is, the more tractive effort can be produced
Metal wheel (clean) on metal track , K is around 0.1 to 0.15
Wheel with (clean) traction tyres on metal track , K is around 0.8 to 0.95
So for example if a bare metal axle carries 100 grams , it can contribute around 10 grams of tractive effort, but the same axle with traction tires will produce 8 to 9.5 times more !
Simply said one axle carrying a load "W" with tyres produces the same tractive effort as up to 8 or 9 "metal to metal" axles!
The other variable is the weight carried by each individual driver axle of a steam loco.
At close inspection you will be able to see that most "driver" axles are just "touching" the track, and carry mostly only their own "weight"
You can check that yourself: place one such lok on the track and try to gently lift the various axles (e.g. with a very small screwdriver)
Some axles will lift the loco (weight carriers, at least the one with traction tires) others (usually placed in the middle) will let themselves be lifted without lifting the whole loco. They are there either pushed down by gravity or a **gentle** spring (just to make sure they make good electrical contact!

)
Same for pony wheels/bogies, just applied by their own weight or a gentle spring action
So what does this tell us?
1° The whole weight (or at least a vast majority...) of the loco is usually carried by two driver axles, and also with a predominance on the axle with the tires
2° The non-weight carrying axles do not contribute any significant traction effort (if any...!)
3° Since they do not contribute any significant effort , the load on the coupling rods is correspondingly very small too...and as long as there is a good alignment (90 or 120 deg) of the drivers cranks on each side, the effort on the rods is "symbolic"
And the absence of (connecting) gears is, in this case, a good idea!
No gears means no noise and "see-through" chassis and lower production cost .
All it takes is to produce the driver axles with cranks aligned properly...
Now , if you have such a loco that really underperforms, there might be problem(s) in the model itself that reduce(s) the weight carried by the actual/predominant "traction" axle.
I usually look a the (close) coupling mechanism with the tender that may bend and could lift the traction axle, or the tyres may be worn, or the "floating" axles (the one you normally could lift slightly with a screwdriver) are "stuck" and carry more weight than their own.
Or the loco is too light...but that's also happening with the real ones!
Hope this helps
Happy Easter
Jacques