Class J's - trackworthiness?
nw-modeling-list at nwhs.org
nw-modeling-list at nwhs.org
Sat Oct 7 20:29:38 EDT 2006
I believe this refers to Mike Ritchdorf (I think I misspelled his name) and
he lives near O'Hare airport. His layout is HO scale with color position
light signals and scenery. I have been there and watched him move a
trainload of loaded (with a real load, not a fake) hopper cars from a mine
that actually dumped the coal into the cars to a rotary car dumper. I think
he would be glad to have anyone visit him if you gave him enough notice that
you were coming from this distance. I can find out his e-mail if anyone is
interested.
Bob Folsom
Clemson, SC
On 10/5/06 4:59 PM, "nw-modeling-list at nwhs.org" <nw-modeling-list at nwhs.org>
wrote:
> Hi Gary,
>
> I love seeing a long post about an engineering topic--figure it must be one of
> yours and I'm sure to learn a lot. Would you mind if I quibble just a bit
> about one statement? You wrote: "Even with computers, only an iterative
> solution is possible (iterative = run the numbers and see what comes out)."
> Iterative in this sense refers to a mathematical method based on the calculus,
> such as Newton-Raphson, that starts with empirical data involving measurements
> on several variables and a model equation based on physical theory that
> interrelates those variables through a set of parameters whose ideal values
> are unknown; "ideal" being defined as those values that minimize some other
> "loss" or "objective" function. If the model equation is linear in the
> parameters, then generally an iterative solution is not required, as in
> multivariate linear regression. Here calculus isn't involved, only algebra.
> Iteration involves finding an approximate solution, then using that solution
> as a starting
> point to find a better solution, and continuing this process until the gain as
> measured by the decrease in the loss function is negligible.
>
> I must be getting old. My pedantry on the point reminds me of a manager at
> Illinois Bell from thirty years ago, long before email. About 10-15 paper
> memos a day would circulate through the department, with a little sheet
> stapled to each where you'd check off your initials after reading it. Frank
> C. would go through every one and mark it up with spelling, punctuation and
> grammar corrections before passing it along.
>
> Sorry guys.
>
> Tom Leuthner
>
> P.S. I believe someone on the list modeling the N&W lives in the greater
> Chicago area. Ever have an open house? What scale?
> ________________________________________
> NW-Modeling-List at nwhs.org
> To change your subscription go to
> http://list.nwhs.org/mailman/options/nw-modeling-list
More information about the NW-Modeling-List
mailing list