EMD - Every Model Different
ALCO - Always Leaking Coolant and Oil
CSX - Coal Spilling eXperts
QUOTE: Originally posted by fiverings I've found the photos that tell me the 103 was equipped with steam generators. There's an article in the April 1975 Model Railroader on the prototype FTs, as well as a modelling article (the cover photo shows Gordon Odegard's Milwaukee Road FT model). The prototype article has a photo credited to R. V. Nixon on p. 49, with the 103 out on the mainline with the North Coast Limited. It's a "down on" shot, clearly showing the boxy air intake vents on both FTB units, of the style used on contemporary E units above their steam generator compartments. More important is the photo on the opposite page, with good detail of the pilot of the 103A . On the fireman's side of the drawbar are two air lines, one with a smaller diameter hose than the other. The larger of the two lines is the air brake line; the smaller almost without doubt is a communication signal line -- this type of line is only found on locomotives intended for (at least part-time) passenger service. The real give away is the still-larger line found on the engineer's side of the drawbar. It terminates with a Barco steam-line coupling. The B unit closest to the camera in the last-mentioned photo has one more clue. On the lower portion of the carbody, between the front end and the first engineroom door, there is a shadow which appears to be a small hatch cover, similar to the doors covering boiler water doors on later boiler-equipped F units. And right above that door, on the roof of the unit, is a projecting U-shaped pipe which is in all likelihood a water overfill.
QUOTE: Originally posted by rrandb QUOTE: Originally posted by SSW9389 Nothing in this link about passenger FTs just some ancient history on FT development from Wallace Abbey. http://utahrails.net/drgw/rg-diesels-index.php Go to the EMC FT link and read all about it. Yes and a very good article and not just for Santa Fe. I am trying to contact Mr Abbey. If anyone knows a way I would be interested. As always ENJOY
QUOTE: Originally posted by SSW9389 Nothing in this link about passenger FTs just some ancient history on FT development from Wallace Abbey. http://utahrails.net/drgw/rg-diesels-index.php Go to the EMC FT link and read all about it.
QUOTE: Originally posted by gemotor Just to add photographic illustration to "passengerfan's" post about the 103 operating on the North Coast Limited, two photos appear in Richard Green's "The Northern Pacific Railway of McGee and Nixon" on pages 221 and 222. They are both shot from above and show the air intake for the steam generators in the B-units. Ya gotta use your imagination to make out what the consist following the dynamometer car might have been. The 17-car train departing Livingston westbound included the dynamometer car plus 4 business cars plus 12 "regular" NCL cars.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Eddystone "I doubt if rudder could withstand the preasure to send steam to the end of a 17 car train. That's why they were pivot joints on hard pipe." rrandb, the hose is not made out of plain rubber, it's rubber reinforced with steel braiding. It can definetly stand the pressure and temperature of the steam. I worked with and repaired hydraulic jacking systems and heavy haul trailers that used rubber hoses and pressure up to 10,000 psi. Another place you could find these rubber steam hoses is in large passenger terminals and yards to keep the cars hot/cool while laying over.