
For now it’s best to limit to two locomotives unless you just want to drive a bunch around at once. These work fine together but the second I start attaching cars, everything goes to hell. Both are procedures also followed by the railroads of the modern world for handling heavy trains.Īs I write this section, I have a WIP 1.7.10 modpack running in the background, and I have four SD40-2 locomotives running around a loop. Traincraft also allows helper locomotives on the rear and and cut into the middle of your train. If you’re using steam locomotives with tenders, this gets tricky. It will basically act like any other freight car, but if uncoupled from the lead locomotive it can be urged to move on its own. Shift-right-click the trailing locomotive with the coupler tool, and the game will give you a text blurb saying the locomotive can be pulled.

Place your trailing locomotive behind it so that they are back-to-back. This is covered in TrainCraft’s guidebook, but since we’re here let’s describe it. Be mindful that you now have to monitor fuel on two engines, and I really wouldn’t suggest doing this with steam locomotives unless it’s an emergency or there is a player to man each locomotive and watch the fuel consumption. If you really need to you can utilize multiple locomotives on your train. They knew that real-world trains are more often than not colossal and need multiple locomotives to move, and they programmed this same thing into TrainCraft.

TrainCraft’s developers were pretty smart from the beginning. The idea for this section really started as a way for me to abuse TrainCraft and document its real capabilities.
