crpulse wrote:I believe the GE model type is C38AChe. The he is for high elevation. Don't know what the mods are for the high altitude running.
It's probably the design of the turbo compressor. If you try to maintain too large a pressure differential over the compressor, it'll stall - i.e. stop taking a "bite" out of the air on the inlet side. This unloads the turbine and turbo speed will increase. The air in the manifold will rush backwards through the compressor, the engine will starve for air, the turbo speed drops, the engine over fuels and belches black smoke. The compressor gets a bite and starts working again and things stabilize - until the pressure differential gets too high again..
You can tell if a locomotive is in this condition because you'll hear the turbo "run away" and then see some black smoke - this cycle repeating every minute or so.
-Don (Random stuff, mostly about trains - what else? http://blerfblog.blogspot.com/)
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