Eight years ago, a friend and I built the K1 Garratt shown in the photo. We used two Roundhouse Billy kits fed from a locally sourced boiler with a single burner. It looked great but was a poor performer. After raising steam until the safety valve blew, it would start off okay but would then run out of steam after about fifty metres. The problem was that the single burner was not generating enough steam for two sets of cylinders. The obvious solution was to add a second burner (the new Accucraft K1 has two burners) but this was seen to be just too difficult. So the loco was put on the shelf and there it has stayed for eight years.
Then, this week, a chance conversation with Gordon Watson of Argyle Loco produced the suggestion from Gordon that I modify the loco to make it a compound....just like the prototype. This is just a matter of connecting the exhaust of the high pressure cylinders in the rear with the inlets of the front cylinders. That way, the burner is generating steam for only one set of cylinders. Okay, the front cylinders should be about twice the size of the rear cylinders due to the lower steam pressure. Mine, being Roundhouse standards, will be the same size so that I won't get anywhere near full power out of the front cylinders. But it has got to give a better result than I had before.
So my question is, does anyone have any experience of building a compound loco for G Scale? Are there any timing or other issues which need to be considered?
Regards
Peter Lucas
MyLocoSound

Then, this week, a chance conversation with Gordon Watson of Argyle Loco produced the suggestion from Gordon that I modify the loco to make it a compound....just like the prototype. This is just a matter of connecting the exhaust of the high pressure cylinders in the rear with the inlets of the front cylinders. That way, the burner is generating steam for only one set of cylinders. Okay, the front cylinders should be about twice the size of the rear cylinders due to the lower steam pressure. Mine, being Roundhouse standards, will be the same size so that I won't get anywhere near full power out of the front cylinders. But it has got to give a better result than I had before.
So my question is, does anyone have any experience of building a compound loco for G Scale? Are there any timing or other issues which need to be considered?
Regards
Peter Lucas
MyLocoSound
