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Like sands through the hourglass....

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Posted by SD70Dude on Wednesday, April 15, 2020 9:46 PM

zugmann

Like when you have cars for the MOW yard and they neglect to take their locks off the switches before they go home so you can give them the cars they ordered?

Or take the lock off and don't put a keeper back in the handle.

Customers do both of those things too.

To be fair, train crews have caused a number of derailments by forgetting to properly secure switches too.

MOW vs Transportation battles are almost as good as Conductor vs Engineer, or Management vs Customers........

Greetings from Alberta

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Posted by tree68 on Wednesday, April 15, 2020 9:41 PM

mvlandsw
That saved your finger from getting sore pushing on it.

Been there.  One of our F units has a spring loaded lever that you have to hold over to keep sand on.  Better than having to keep a button pushed...

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Posted by mvlandsw on Wednesday, April 15, 2020 8:08 PM

Some of the newer engine have sand switches that time out (usually just when you need it most) even when moving.

The wooden fusee striker caps were just the right size the wedge into the some of the pushbutton sander switches. That saved your finger from getting sore pushing on it.

Mark Vinski

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Posted by zugmann on Wednesday, April 15, 2020 9:21 AM

mudchicken
Any roadmaster that has a good sized yard or engine facility wonders why so many folks don't know where the O-F-F switch is on the locomotive for the sanders.

Like when you have cars for the MOW yard and they neglect to take their locks off the switches before they go home so you can give them the cars they ordered?

 

Happened more than once.  None of us are perfect. 

 

Some engines, when you center the reverse, the "sand" light goes out, even though the sanders are still blowing.  

It's been fun.  But it isn't much fun anymore.   Signing off for now. 


  

The opinions expressed here represent my own and not those of my employer, any other railroad, company, or person.t fun any

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Posted by BigJim on Wednesday, April 15, 2020 7:50 AM

tree68
In steam days, I understand that some railroads had steam jets behind the drivers on passenger locomotives to blow the sand off the rails.  The idea was to reduce rolling resistance.


Freight locos used them too.

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Posted by Semper Vaporo on Wednesday, April 15, 2020 4:42 AM

mudchicken

Embarrassed

Murphy of Arabia (SD good enuf?):

Any roadmaster that has a good sized yard or engine facility wonders why so many folks don't know where the O-F-F switch is on the locomotive for the sanders. Kinda hard buying into the idea that it's always a defective locomotive. That stuff (screened silica sand) fouls everything it gets into. The eco-friendly switch plate lubricant is like a magnet for sand. The red stuff is hard to set on and even harder to get off. (not like there is a really available steam hose around anymore).... Anyone seen a Kershaw yard cleaner around?

{Deleted the photo so Internet Explorer users can read the paragraph that was covered by the photo} 

I miss good ol' Lubriplate graphite 'n grease , but fortunately I don't play roadmaster anymore.(laundress BossHen is grateful for that)... Like PDN's comment and the ones about cleaning out the flangeways full of engine crater and sand with the track forces, some things just happen in any era.Embarrassed

Frozen waste sand in crossings and trackwork flangeways is a nightmare to chip out. 

The Alco sand fill "notches" were pretty obvious on their hood units and later switchers.

 

Semper Vaporo

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Posted by mudchicken on Wednesday, April 15, 2020 12:03 AM

Embarrassed

Murphy of Arabia (SD good enuf?):

Any roadmaster that has a good sized yard or engine facility wonders why so many folks don't know where the O-F-F switch is on the locomotive for the sanders. Kinda hard buying into the idea that it's always a defective locomotive. That stuff (screened silica sand) fouls everything it gets into. The eco-friendly switch plate lubricant is like a magnet for sand. The red stuff is hard to set on and even harder to get off. (not like there is a really available steam hose around anymore).... Anyone seen a Kershaw yard cleaner around?

KYC 550

 

 

I miss good ol' Lubriplate graphite 'n grease , but fortunately I don't play roadmaster anymore.(laundress BossHen is grateful for that)... Like PDN's comment and the ones about cleaning out the flangeways full of engine crater and sand with the track forces, some things just happen in any era.Embarrassed

Frozen waste sand in crossings and trackwork flangeways is a nightmare to chip out. 

The Alco sand fill "notches" were pretty obvious on their hood units and later switchers.

Mudchicken Nothing is worth taking the risk of losing a life over. Come home tonight in the same condition that you left home this morning in. Safety begins with ME.... cinscocom-west
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Posted by tree68 on Tuesday, April 14, 2020 7:00 AM

NDG
Many Fire Trucks wore chains all winter.

There are now available devices that swing into place when chains are needed.   You can see the short chains hanging down next to the drive wheels on vehicles so equipped.

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Posted by NDG on Monday, April 13, 2020 9:41 PM

mvlandsw

In the 1950's/60's some buses in Pittsburgh, Pa. had sanders in front of the rear dual wheels.

 

 

 

You jogged my memory!
 
Montreal Can Car/Brill Autobusses 2500-49 had lower gearing and sanders for Mountain Route.
 
 
Note 6.
 
Early moring Ecole/School buses were equipped with tire chains on bad days.
 
Many Fire Trucks wore chains all winter.
 
Tramways ran plows and sweepers all night til their end. Some cars fitted with ice scrapers on trolley poles to deice wire.
 
Certain cars had scarifiers behind rear truck to break ice btwn rails and from building up to lifting of Traction Motor casings.
 
Winter.
 

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Posted by mvlandsw on Monday, April 13, 2020 8:53 PM

In the 1950's/60's some buses in Pittsburgh, Pa. had sanders in front of the rear dual wheels.

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Posted by SD70Dude on Monday, April 13, 2020 5:11 PM

https://railpictures.net/photo/656980/

Note heavy white coating on lead truck, slightly less on rear truck.

Someone left the lead axle sand on......

Greetings from Alberta

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Posted by BaltACD on Monday, April 13, 2020 4:34 PM

The PA Turnpike used to cross the then double track B&O P&W Sub between Pittsburgh and New Castle - it crossed over the tracks on the Bakerstown Hill grade.  When glancing down at the track structure it was easy to tell the normal up hill track from the down hill track (Current of Traffic signalling) - the Up hill track had a continuous white cast to it - down hill was just the norm black/brown track structure.

In the middle 70's, the P&W was single tracked by Chessie System.  In the early 2000's leased the P&W to both the Allegheny Valley RR and the Buffalo & Pittsburgh.  The AVL & BP perform all Dispatching and maintenance on the line.

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Posted by SD70Dude on Monday, April 13, 2020 4:26 PM

Paul_D_North_Jr

MOW people hate sand, for the reasons Murphy asked and zug answered - it fouls/ clogs the ballast in areas of heavy use (grades), and gums up the switch slide plates (and anything else similar, such as at a movable point frog) as well as filling the spaces around the operating and connecting rods, which means they need to be cleaned and lubed fairly often.  I understand the C&S people also hate sand because of the deleterious effect it has on their gizmos, but since I don't belong to that tribe, I'll let someone else speak to that.  Often there are general rules discouraging the use of sand in such places, but the need to keep a train moving on a heavy grade without slipping and stalling usually supersedes that.  Also I understand that traction motors don't like it, but again will defer to someone else.  

Interesting article (mainly Euro-centric), including some of the downsides - especially interfering with good electrical contact for the signals: 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sandbox_(locomotive) 

Interesting discussion here:

https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2007/03/06/E7-3885/locomotive-safety-standards-sanders 

Ad and price from one supplier - don't know anything more about it than what is shown: 

https://rrtools.com/product/traction-sand-20-40-coal-slag/ 

Would be interesting to see the technical specs for such sand.  AAR has one, but I can't access it: "Specification M-916—Sand for Traction".  

Interesting discussion here on "locomotive sand":

https://www.trainorders.com/discussion/read.php?1,2334762

Some here will appreciate and may want to comment on this quote from that TO thread (also has comments on SP sources): 

"Seems I remember that the Santa Fe in Sou Calif obtained
company sand from the Escondido District at Falda-Talica
siding...."

Interesting comments here from 2011, including some by a couple of current participants:

http://cs.trains.com/trn/f/111/t/196820.aspx

- "Sand for traction" 

More ads for sand:

https://www.olimag.com/en/traction/ 

http://www.wieserailservices.com/ - abotu halfway down, shows a price 

(Google is your friend)

- PDN. 

 

Why settle for plain old sand, when you can use genuine Trackmobile Trac-Grip!

https://trackmobile.com/project/trac-grip/

Greetings from Alberta

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Posted by SD70Dude on Monday, April 13, 2020 4:21 PM

Most units have two sander switches, "manual sand" which will operate all the sanders in the consist, and "lead axle sand". 

GE Dash-8's do not allow manual sanding above 7 mph.  You can use lead axle sand at any speed on those, but it doesn't do a whole lot.  

This may vary from railroad to railroad, but most if not all modern units have spring loaded sander control switches, so you cannot leave them on constantly (I tie my keychain lanyard from the manual sand switch to something else to hold it on, the rear headlight switch on our GEVO's is in just the right place!).  For units with push button sanders, a bent up torpedo clip works pretty well to hold the button in, or the red flag from the flagging kit.

Older units like SD40-2's have a simple on/off switch that will stay in either position, so you can leave it on and then in theory forget about it and waste all the sand (not that anyone has ever done that, especially not when leaving units on the shop track). 

I agree with Jeff that the computers on both GE and EMD units do not sand early or often enough. 

Units from both builders have "sand anti-clog" features that periodically blow a shot of air through the sander valves and hoses, even if they are not in use. 

Greetings from Alberta

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Posted by jeffhergert on Monday, April 13, 2020 3:54 PM

As Zug said newer engines won't allow manual sand above certain speed ranges when in power throttle.  They all will allow manual sanding in dynamic braking.  All modern (at least the last 20 or so years) EMD engines are so equipped.  I've noticed some of the newest GE engines also have this affliction.  When above the speeds, and it varys between models but generally about 15mph, the computer can put down sand.  I've noticed that usually it takes a lot of slipping before the computer decides it needs sand.  On our worst hill, I hate to have an EMD lead when there is slick rain conditions with a close to full tonnage train. By the time the computer decides to lay sand it's usually too little, too late.  You've lost speed too early on the hill to not stall.

As i said manual sand is always available in dynamics and I use it.  Might even use it on that "flat as a pancake, treeless desert" that really doesn't exist (The flat as a pancake part) under the right conditions.  I've noticed with sand you may not have to go as deeply into dynos as without it.  The help sand gives may not be much, but sometimes it's enough.

One place sand is not supposed to be used is over the moveable parts of an interlocking or other controlled point.  It's because sand is an insulator and enough could negate track detection of equipment or maybe when points have locked up.  Either way, it's fun to shut off the manual sand coming up to such a place and then have the computer turn them back on through the restricted area.

Jeff

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Posted by BaltACD on Monday, April 13, 2020 3:53 PM

CShaveRR
I can't find any figures for capacities of modern wide-nosed locomotives, but second-generation EMD locomotives could hold anywhere from 56 to 75 cubic feet of sand.  Switchers held a lot less, sometimes as little as 17 cubic feet.

https://www.thedieselshop.us/DataAC4400.HTML

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Posted by CShaveRR on Monday, April 13, 2020 3:07 PM

I can't find any figures for capacities of modern wide-nosed locomotives, but second-generation EMD locomotives could hold anywhere from 56 to 75 cubic feet of sand.  Switchers held a lot less, sometimes as little as 17 cubic feet.

Carl

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Posted by tree68 on Monday, April 13, 2020 1:29 PM

Damp sand is a problem.

We once had someone get some play sand for use in the locomotives.  It had small pebbles in it.  Took ages to work all of that through and out of the system.

In steam days, I understand that some railroads had steam jets behind the drivers on passenger locomotives to blow the sand off the rails.  The idea was to reduce rolling resistance.

LarryWhistling
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Posted by NDG on Monday, April 13, 2020 1:15 PM

 

Some Diesels had the sand boxes located on the trucks.
 
As here GMD1. Scroll Down to CN 1912 in Green/Yellow.
 
 
CLC DT2. Sand Boxes by Steps.
 
 
There it would FREEZE if damp.
 
Ditto on sand box in short hood.
 
Back in the day it was common to go into high short hood and bang on sand tank w Yellow Hose Wrench when it started to slip on a bad, cold, dark night, the summit miles away.
 
This practice would leave dents in tank and knock the paint off.
 
On the other hand, when descending on GP9s etc.  the Mechanical Speedometer would drop to ZERO when in heavy Dynamic on poor rail.
 
If not corrected, a Thump Thump Thump would soon appear once wheels rotated again.
 
Back in Steam days some coaling stations had a conical coal fired heater at ground level over which sand was shoveled. Once dry, the Sand was blown by compressed air up into sand tower, then dispensed by gravity into Sand Domes on locomotives.
 
Some modern steam engines had a Sand Bin on OUTSIDE Rear Cab Wall ( Which had no doors as Oil Burner ) this sand accessed by Fireman with scoop and poured thru opening in Fire Door to Sand Flues of soot buildup which hindered heat transfer to metal/water = steam.
 
When working hard the draft would pull the sand thru and the Exhaust would turn Black.
 
Not to be done in Tunnels nor Snowsheds.
 
If baffle in Smokebox to divert draft flow, it's rear side would be pitted by sand emerging from tubes/flues.
 
Cinders would clear soot on Coal Burners.
 
Violent wheel slip in tunnels account dripping water could lift all sorts of debris out the stack and really grime up a train behind.
 
Boiling oil over in tender would create a mess.
 
Sand would then be dumped on tender top to cover oil for walking upon.
 
In Diesel Times sand would be put on top of heavy grease dripping from Traction Motor gear casings.
 
And so on.
 

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Posted by Murphy Siding on Monday, April 13, 2020 12:23 PM

PNWRMNM
 
Murphy Siding

Are there certain kinds of sand used for the purpose, like silica sand because it's so round and flows easily?

 

 

Murphy,

The best locomotive sand has lots of angular faces for better grip between rail and wheel and to avoid the higher loss from top of the rail associated with round grains. No beach sand!

To the best of my knowledge, railroad sand is quarried. You might ask your local ballast train supplier if they recover their fines for sale as sand. IIRC they are mining quartzite which should make nice traction sand for both railroad and highway use.

Mac McCulloch

Mac

 

Ah yes- they use a lot of crushed quartzite on icy roads here. It looks a lot like mini arrowheads and if you pick some up it feels really rough grit sandpaper.

Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.

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Posted by BaltACD on Monday, April 13, 2020 12:22 PM

The prime consideration about use of sand on the railroad - IT MUST BE DRY.

The fuel service trucks that CSX normally contracts refueling with also top off the sand boxes on the locomotives they service, in addition to pumping the chemical toilets - at least they are supposed to, if they do in fact may be open to question. 

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Posted by Paul_D_North_Jr on Monday, April 13, 2020 10:20 AM

MOW people hate sand, for the reasons Murphy asked and zug answered - it fouls/ clogs the ballast in areas of heavy use (grades), and gums up the switch slide plates (and anything else similar, such as at a movable point frog) as well as filling the spaces around the operating and connecting rods, which means they need to be cleaned and lubed fairly often.  I understand the C&S people also hate sand because of the deleterious effect it has on their gizmos, but since I don't belong to that tribe, I'll let someone else speak to that.  Often there are general rules discouraging the use of sand in such places, but the need to keep a train moving on a heavy grade without slipping and stalling usually supersedes that.  Also I understand that traction motors don't like it, but again will defer to someone else.  

Interesting article (mainly Euro-centric), including some of the downsides - especially interfering with good electrical contact for the signals: 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sandbox_(locomotive) 

Interesting discussion here:

https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2007/03/06/E7-3885/locomotive-safety-standards-sanders 

Ad and price from one supplier - don't know anything more about it than what is shown: 

https://rrtools.com/product/traction-sand-20-40-coal-slag/ 

Would be interesting to see the technical specs for such sand.  AAR has one, but I can't access it: "Specification M-916—Sand for Traction".  

Interesting discussion here on "locomotive sand":

https://www.trainorders.com/discussion/read.php?1,2334762

Some here will appreciate and may want to comment on this quote from that TO thread (also has comments on SP sources): 

"Seems I remember that the Santa Fe in Sou Calif obtained
company sand from the Escondido District at Falda-Talica
siding...."

Interesting comments here from 2011, including some by a couple of current participants:

http://cs.trains.com/trn/f/111/t/196820.aspx - "Sand for traction" 

More ads for sand:

https://www.olimag.com/en/traction/ 

http://www.wieserailservices.com/ - abotu halfway down, shows a price 

(Google is your friend)

- PDN. 

"This Fascinating Railroad Business" (title of 1943 book by Robert Selph Henry of the AAR)
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Posted by 54light15 on Monday, April 13, 2020 10:18 AM

The streetcars of Toronto carry sand in hoppers under the frontmost seats. At some of the turn-around stations like Dundas West or Broadview, there are big plastic boxes full of sand on the platform and the driver fills the hopper with a shovel. 

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Posted by PNWRMNM on Monday, April 13, 2020 8:54 AM

Murphy Siding

Are there certain kinds of sand used for the purpose, like silica sand because it's so round and flows easily?

Murphy,

The best locomotive sand has lots of angular faces for better grip between rail and wheel and to avoid the higher loss from top of the rail associated with round grains. No beach sand!

To the best of my knowledge, railroad sand is quarried. You might ask your local ballast train supplier if they recover their fines for sale as sand. IIRC they are mining quartzite which should make nice traction sand for both railroad and highway use.

Mac McCulloch

Mac

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Posted by Paul of Covington on Monday, April 13, 2020 7:52 AM

   Hey, I've been thinking about sand lately, too.   Murphy asked and Zug answered some of them.  Thanks.  A couple more:

   1. Are there sand boxes in both ends of the locomotive?   As I recall, diagrams I've seen only show one.

   2. Steam engines had their sand boxes on top of the boiler where I think the heat would keep it dry.  Is there any provision for keeping the sand dry with heat or anything else?  Or is damp sand not a problem?  I would think it would tend to clump up.

   Murphy asked about sand on flat terrain.  I remember years ago I was watching the wheels on the Genesis locomotives on City Of N.O. when it started moving in Hammond, La. (perfectly flat land), and it spit some sand out when it started.  I assumed it was set up to automatically do this on every start.  Of course I realize Amtrak procedures could very well be different from those on freight trains.

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Posted by Jay Potter on Sunday, April 12, 2020 11:18 PM

5.  CSXT (and I presume many other railroads) has very strict specifications for the quality of traction sand that it purchases.

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Posted by zugmann on Sunday, April 12, 2020 9:35 PM

1. Both. Newer engines are more restrictive with when sand can be laid down.  Older engines, you just flip the switch anytime. Also used when starting out a lot, and used for braking as well.  

2. Both

3. Yeah, it can also mess up switches (gets in the grease)

4. Air

5. It's a fine sand, but I'm no sand expert.  You don't want non-sand things in the sand - it will clog up the sanders. 

6. Sure.  

7. Don't know.  Part of a daily inspectioni s to make sure the sanders are, in fact, laying down sand (used for emergency stopping).  You can look in the sand hatches to see how much is in there, too. 

 

It's been fun.  But it isn't much fun anymore.   Signing off for now. 


  

The opinions expressed here represent my own and not those of my employer, any other railroad, company, or person.t fun any

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Like sands through the hourglass....
Posted by Murphy Siding on Sunday, April 12, 2020 9:19 PM

     I sure don't know much about the use of sand by locomotives. I know that sand is used to provide traction on rails, and I know the local BNSF yard has a sand tower. That's about it. So, some questions:

1) Is sand used on hills, or on slippery tracks, or both?

2) Is the sand automatically put down by a wheel slip sensor, or does the engineer turn the sander dispenser on and off?

3) If sand is used a lot in a place, does the ballast in that place eventually fill up with sand and cause problems?

4) Does the sand fall because of gravity or is is pushed out with air?

5) Are there certain kinds of sand used for the purpose, like silica sand because it's so round and flows easily?

6) Are there rail lines that never need sand, like flat as a pancake through a treeless desert, for example?

7) How much sand does a locomotive carry? Who checks the level on the sand dipstick?

8) How did I get this far in life knowing so little about locomotive wheel sanding?

Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.

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