jchnhtfd wrote: Placing the fuel tanks above the main frame rails is a good way to protect them from track debris and most derailments (not all).
Placing the fuel tanks above the main frame rails is a good way to protect them from track debris and most derailments (not all).
Then you run into an Amtrak SDP40F type of problem.
Pump
The article about Genset locos in "Locomotive" includes a picture of the fuel tank, on which is plainly displayed "This locmotive (sic) is equipped with S-5506 impact resistant fuel tank. Contact locomotive engineering before doing any cutting or welding in this area."
I did a quick search on it and found several references, but I didn't really read them. It is obvious, however that FRA and others recognize the problem.
Larry Resident Microferroequinologist (at least at my house) Everyone goes home; Safety begins with you My Opinion. Standard Disclaimers Apply. No Expiration Date Come ride the rails with me! There's one thing about humility - the moment you think you've got it, you've lost it...
Self sealing fuel tanks do work astonishingly well, all things considered. For what they are intended to do: seal punctures. However, unhappily, the most typical failure in a locomotive fuel tank is a gash, with significant length and significant displacement of the edges. Self sealing tanks do not work in such instances. I might also note that they aren't perfect...
Placing the fuel tanks above the main frame rails is a good way to protect them from track debris and most derailments (not all). However, you run into the question: where? The fuel tank is a fairly large volume; there just isn't that much extra space in the clearance envelope.
The total cost of a tanker spill is awfully hard to capture. Some of the crude from the Exxon Valdez is still lying around on the bottom. Is it a good thing? No. Is it bad? How bad? What's the "cost" of this? Who knows?
Dumping a whole taker's worth of crude in one spot is certainly worse than dribs and drabs over a long period of time spread around ports throughout the world, no?
Are double hulls worth it? Can anyone say assuredly yes or no?
Dumping 4000 gallons of #2 onto the ROW is a much easier thing to calculate. You just dig it up and land fill it - similar to gas station tank leak remediation.
-Don (Random stuff, mostly about trains - what else? http://blerfblog.blogspot.com/)
Capt Bob Johnson wrote:Since when does that reasoning matter!
Self-sealing fuel bladders are used in every form of motor racing carrying every type of liquid fuel. They have made fires after a crash a thing of the past, so rarely does that happen these days. They work with diesel too, since Audi just won the 24 Hours of Le Mans with a diesel engined car.
I suspect the reason they are not used on locomotives is that old one: the cost.
Jack
oltmannd wrote: Nataraj wrote:Isn't the ICE a EMU high speed train?? Why would it have a feul tank?? Not in Iowa, it isn't.....
Nataraj wrote:Isn't the ICE a EMU high speed train?? Why would it have a feul tank??
Not in Iowa, it isn't.....
LMAO!!
Mechanical Department "No no that's fine shove that 20 pound set all around the yard... those shoes aren't hell and a half to change..."
The Missabe Road: Safety First
Alco's early 'S' switcher and the RS1/RS2/RSC2 had the fuel tank under the floor of the cab! Nice to be standing or sitting on all that fuel!
Current engines have welded steel tanks. A 'bladder' will only work if you have a penetration like the rifle shot described. Most derailments where the fuel tank would be ripped open would tear/rupture the bladder as well. The E8/E9 series of EMD passenger engines had a 1250 gallon fuel tank 'inside' of a 1350 gallon boiler water tank. The UP DDA40X engines had 'skids' built into the tank for derailment protection. Current 4,000-5,000 galllon tanks are single wall construction.
Jim
Modeling BNSF and Milwaukee Road in SW Wisconsin
They were called "Self sealing fuel tanks" and all American aircraft in WWII carried them. It was a regular sheet metal tank, that was coated with a type of rubber, that when exposed to fuel, would plug the leak. I forget the name of the material, at them moment. The British used something similar called "Linatex" to line the tanks of the Spitfire and Hurricane. In fact, the Hurricane, having a tank behind the engine, the RAF figured that the engine would protect the tank from any damage, but after quite a few pilots died or were horribly burned, (burning fuel from the punctured tank would incinerate the pilot) during the Battle of Britain, the RAF decided to line that fuel tank as well.
I often wondered about the tanks on a locomotive, and I wonder if a self sealing tank would be practical...
Quentin
On our old 1950 Baldwin DRS 6-6-1500 at the Arizona Railway Museum, the fuel tank is single walled and apparently made of 1/4 or 1/2 inch welded plate, which is quite heavier than a lot of equipmant I've seen (keep in mind I don't deal with stuff less than 40 years old very much).
Perhaps the safest way to fit a fuel tank is how Baldwin installed the tanks for AS-16s that didn't have steam generators, putting them inside the short hood. The tanks were usually 900 gallons, but there's more space available if it were desired to use a larger tank, and the external 1200 gallon belly mounted tank could also be used as well.
As for current locomotives, I think adding an 1/8" thick outer skin spaced about an inch out around the outside of the tank would make an excellent FOD deflector. Sure, it would get punctured alot more often than the normal tank wall, but just having it there to deflect or redirect larger objects to a less threatening angle could significantly reduce the number of tank failures due to flying rocks and debris. Then all you'd have to do is put a sheet metal patch on the hole, and you're protected for another trip.
I'm not sure what you could do about protecting against cracks and punctures during derailment, aside from building it as armored as a battleship. Fuel spills with always be a problem, but perhaps some sort of entraping system or something to absorbe the fuel if it leaks could be developed. Like a foam lining around the tank that if it comes in contact with the fuel will react, expanding and absorbing the fuel like a sponge. Actually, didn't they use something like that in WWII aircraft?
Anyway, there are ways to safeguard fueltanks and other equipment, it's just a matter of weather the railroads want to use them or not. Matthew Imbrogno-Mechanical Vollenteer, Arizona Railway Museumwww.azrymuseum.org
oltmannd wrote: doghouse wrote: Several weeks back, there was a thread dealing with a runaway train and someone attempting to shoot the fuel cut-off valve. I stated that I had one put a bullet through a fuel tank of an old locomotive. In conversation with my co-workers about this incident, I was informed that it indeed was not a locomotive fuel tank. This got me thinking? Just what would it take to put a hole in a fuel tank? Do the Railroads have problems with debris on the tracks? Any information and stories would be welcome The tanks are single walled and debris is a problem. There have been all sorts of attempts at improving the situation but I'm not aware of any that have been implemented, other than what GE incorporated in their Genesis locomotive design. That has a compartmentalized tank perhaps with some sort of lining or bladder on the inside.
doghouse wrote: Several weeks back, there was a thread dealing with a runaway train and someone attempting to shoot the fuel cut-off valve. I stated that I had one put a bullet through a fuel tank of an old locomotive. In conversation with my co-workers about this incident, I was informed that it indeed was not a locomotive fuel tank. This got me thinking? Just what would it take to put a hole in a fuel tank? Do the Railroads have problems with debris on the tracks? Any information and stories would be welcome
Several weeks back, there was a thread dealing with a runaway train and someone attempting to shoot the fuel cut-off valve. I stated that I had one put a bullet through a fuel tank of an old locomotive. In conversation with my co-workers about this incident, I was informed that it indeed was not a locomotive fuel tank. This got me thinking?
Just what would it take to put a hole in a fuel tank? Do the Railroads have problems with debris on the tracks? Any information and stories would be welcome
The tanks are single walled and debris is a problem. There have been all sorts of attempts at improving the situation but I'm not aware of any that have been implemented, other than what GE incorporated in their Genesis locomotive design. That has a compartmentalized tank perhaps with some sort of lining or bladder on the inside.
The solution Don mentioned -- a tough but flexible bladder inside the tank -- is about the only way one can go. The problem is rather simple, when you think about it: building a single or even double wall tank which could take the force (even slowly) of a 100 ton plus locomotive going over an object lodged firmly in the roadbed is pretty close to hopeless (3" thick steel wall? might do it...). There are, however, other problems with bladders, and sooner or later you run into a cost/benefit type of problem.
Brian (IA) http://blhanel.rrpicturearchives.net.
I think fuel tanks are double walled.
I have seen fuel tanks crack or rip in derailments.
I have seen a fuel tank tare open when a man who was found to be mentally unstable,piled up large rocks in the middle of the "gauge" (between the rails).The lead engine stuck the pile of rocks.The tank leaked slow at first ,but when the crew was weighing the coal train they was on,they stated to smell it more and more .Then it cracked open and poured out at a much faster rate.
I was on the work train that dug the contaminated ballast up.It was an all day job.
Collin ,operator of the " Eastern Kentucky & Ohio R.R."
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