Hello everybody
Why is it that the NS only orders 4000 hp road units when everybody else orders 4400 hp road units from GE? Is it that the reliability of the diesel engines increases dramatically if they produce 400 hp less?
Thank you for your replies.
Frank
"If you need a helping hand, you'll find one at the end of your arm."
Mike WSOR engineer | HO scale since 1988 | Visit our club www.WCGandyDancers.com
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BigJim wrote:I think that there is a key that you have to have to make to swap over.
Yes , it resembles a diagonal wire cutter .
I've had a couple of units that must have slipped by the person that derates them. I pulled up the Loco Monitor and the unit was indicating 4500 - 4600HP!
Sometimes I wonder just how accurate those readouts are. I have stopped waiting on a meet and let the unit auto shut down. I had the monitor on watching the temps on the water, oil and Traction Motors. We sat there for at least a couple of hours and the TM temp went down to about the ambient air temp. As soon as the unit started again and before loading, the TM temp was showing something way up there, like well over 150. The reading took a long time to come down. I asked an electrican about this and he said it was just a guess by the onboard computer in the offbeat way it monitors things like that.
the spartan cab stuff was also because of costs. at the time of their introduction, safety cabs cost more. so NS stuck with spartan cabs. then after safety cabs became the only cab offered, the price was dropped to the same as the spartan cabs originally cost. hence NS went crazy with C40-9Ws.
although i never did understand why they weren't all over that safety cab design when it first came out. they were notorious for high hoods and running units backwards all for the sake of crew protection. so it would seem like this new design with collision posts is a godsend to that purpose
Your friendly neighborhood CNW fan.
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