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Old 10-29-2021, 12:04 PM
swaghauler swaghauler is offline
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Join Date: Jan 2015
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Adm.Lee View Post
I suspect an answer lies somewhere in this forum, but I'm not finding it easily.

Assume a standard pre-war railroad car, preferably a passenger coach or sleeper. I am presuming horses could be hitched to one, to pull it along. Any estimates on how many would be needed? Two, four?

I'm thinking about an encounter with a Soviet ambulance train, using a coach (or two?) to carry wounded from a front-line area to a rear-area hospital. Rail travel might be more smooth & comfortable than an unsprung wagon on a potholed road. We're not looking for speed, but smoothness.

I found that a European-style coach might weigh 50 tons, 75 fully loaded.

Isn't there something said about rail wheels being 7x more frictionless than road wheels?

Worst case, I'm going to say 4 horses, and my players probably won't call me on it.
A typical Percheron or Clydesdale can pull 4k kilograms. A Belgium can pull 3k kilos and a large Morgan or Courser (Amish cart horse) can pull 2k with only average effort.
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