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Tractive Effort of Locomotives?
Tractive Effort of Locomotives?
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Anonymous
Member since
April 2003
305,205 posts
Tractive Effort of Locomotives?
Posted by
Anonymous
on Wednesday, February 28, 2001 7:16 PM
The term "tractive effort" is used when discribing a locomotive. I would like to know how I can calculate the value. I have found out it has a lot to do with the wieght of the locomotive. What else and does anyone know the formula needed to do the calculation? JL.
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Anonymous
Member since
April 2003
305,205 posts
Posted by
Anonymous
on Thursday, March 1, 2001 9:21 PM
Here's a formula for the tractive effort of a steam engine:
Traditional formula for figuring tractive effort of a 2 cylinder steam locomotive:
(BP X .85) X (cb X cb) X cs
___________________________ = TE
dd
BP is boiler pressure
cb is cylinder bore
cs is cylinder stroke
dd is driver wheel diameter
TE is tractive effort
Example for K-36:
(.85 X 195) X (20 X 20) X 24
____________________________ = 36,136.3636 lbs.
This is a theoretical value. Hope this helps.
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Anonymous
Member since
April 2003
305,205 posts
Posted by
Anonymous
on Saturday, March 3, 2001 10:20 AM
Thanks Joe! This is exactly what I've been looking for. I guess in todays railroading the BP and cb and cs of the steam engine all get combined into an amperage value or horse power rating for dissels? And the value would be derated like the BP value say at 85% level again? I was suprised to see total wieght of the engine was not in the calculation at all. I thought it had more to do with the tractive effort or is that tractive force. I guess I still have some more unanswered questions related to the topic, if you know any more formulas? thanks again. James.
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Anonymous
Member since
April 2003
305,205 posts
Posted by
Anonymous
on Sunday, March 4, 2001 1:18 PM
There are lots of discusssions of this topic on the Web. Using the Google.com search engine, I got a lot of stuff entering the term tractive effort. That's how I got the formula I posted the other day. Here's the URL of a good discussion of steam vs. diesel performance I found using google.com:
http://www.trainweb.org/railwaytechnical/st-vs-de.html
Hope that helps.
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Anonymous
Member since
April 2003
305,205 posts
Posted by
Anonymous
on Monday, March 5, 2001 8:10 PM
yes it does, thanks for the link
James.
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