She who has no signature! cinscocom-tmw
QUOTE: Originally posted by Mookie A question from the curious one. Why would you need more horsepower when the SD70MAC with a unit on the head end and on the rear end, seems to move a lot of coal across Wyoming and Nebraska and on east. Is it because of mountains? I am trying to follow this, but it is a little over my head. Jen
QUOTE: Originally posted by Mookie Ok - that is clear enough. But freight back here is almost never behind an SD70 - always a Dash 9 or SD38 and SD40's. But then we haven't had a mountain here in just ages. I noticed this weekend, most of the freights were Dash 9's with SD's as helpers. I appreciate the explanation! Jen
QUOTE: Originally posted by crblues i think that the sd40-2 will always outperform any of these new a.c. traction units any day. yeah, they may gulp a little more fuel, but you need PERFORMANCE in a railroad. the sd40-2 was, and still is the answer.
-Don (Random stuff, mostly about trains - what else? http://blerfblog.blogspot.com/)
QUOTE: Originally posted by oltmannd This is an interesting thread which raises a few questions. Is inverter technology still evolving/improving? Are the high power GTOs getting any better? Is the control system improving/evolving as microprocessor technology improves?
QUOTE: Originally posted by railpac Ok, so maybe we can't just drop a 16-710 into a SD40-2, however if we remanufactured (different from a rebuild) a SD40-2 with the right cooling systems, oil and fuel equipment, and computers, to the specifications of an SD70, it would be cheaper than a new SD70, or any new loco for that matter. The only drawback would be not being able to place the HT-R (i think thats the name) radial truck under the SD40-2, because the HT-C uses a different connection. Also, what about just dropping a 12-710 into a SD40-2, same horsepower, same electrical output, it wouldn't need much modifications to the existing systems, right?
QUOTE: Originally posted by SSW9389 How many miles did GE and GM put on the 6,000 horsepower units before production began? Back in the old days significant demonstrator tours were the order of the day before production of new units began.
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