Gen-Set is the current rage for yard/local engines. The fuel saving can be quite impressive(and they meet the current emissions standards). The down side is that they have experienced quite a few engine fires. I suspect this will be fixed over time as the the actual modular generator sets get 'railroad ruggedized'. Many of these outrage have been due to electical cable or a fuel line breaking loose from their brackets. Swithcing service can be quite rough with lots of 'G' forces.
As these units 'age', it will be interesting to see in maintenace costs stay in-line or rise as there are 3 of everythign to go wrong. Time will tell.
EMD also has a 2200 hp V8 710ECO package to upgrade exising GP's as well(and has even sold this to KSC). EMD also offers a 3000 hp V12 710ECO package aimed at upgrading the SD40-2 market. EMD get around the 'turbo lag' issue by direct coupling the the crankshaft to the turbo at low RPM. A centrifical clutch disengages the turbo at high RPM when there is enough 'boost' preassure to drive the turbo. The GE 'Straight 6' GEVO has been announced, but I have heard of no orders at this time. Perhaps as the economy recovers, we will see enough new locomotive orders to see what direction the railroads are going.
Jim
Modeling BNSF and Milwaukee Road in SW Wisconsin
creepycrankThe Gen-Set idea seems to be great at least on paper.
-Don (Random stuff, mostly about trains - what else? http://blerfblog.blogspot.com/)
BNSF and UP have lots of gensets down here in Houston. Most of UP's are along the ship channel on the east side since there is loco maintenance facilities over there. Supposedly they are really working hard to try to improve their reliability as they are down on average about 40% of the time. They have called it "teething problems". The heaviest switching in town, at least by UP, is still not done by gensets.
I think the concept is just fine. As with the first of anything, there are going to be lots of issues to work out. My biggest complaint is that they are so ugly.
jrbernier Gen-Set is the current rage for yard/local engines. The fuel saving can be quite impressive(and they meet the current emissions standards). The down side is that they have experienced quite a few engine fires. I suspect this will be fixed over time as the the actual modular generator sets get 'railroad ruggedized'. Many of these outrage have been due to electical cable or a fuel line breaking loose from their brackets. Swithcing service can be quite rough with lots of 'G' forces. As these units 'age', it will be interesting to see in maintenace costs stay in-line or rise as there are 3 of everythign to go wrong. Time will tell. EMD also has a 2200 hp V8 710ECO package to upgrade exising GP's as well(and has even sold this to KSC). EMD also offers a 3000 hp V12 710ECO package aimed at upgrading the SD40-2 market. EMD get around the 'turbo lag' issue by direct coupling the the crankshaft to the turbo at low RPM. A centrifical clutch disengages the turbo at high RPM when there is enough 'boost' preassure to drive the turbo. The GE 'Straight 6' GEVO has been announced, but I have heard of no orders at this time. Perhaps as the economy recovers, we will see enough new locomotive orders to see what direction the railroads are going. Jim
Interstingly, UP is apparently rebuilding some SD60's with the SD32 ECO packages according to some reports I have read recently..
"I Often Dream of Trains"-From the Album of the Same Name by Robyn Hitchcock
oltmannd(GP38s running flat out in road service always make me wince when I think about the fuel!)
Sure does sound neat though.
Gensets save fuel by being broke a good chunk of the time. I think it is telling that there are very few not purchased with some sort of government subsidy. Maybe it is part of the stimulus package, more jobs in the shops to fix them after failure.
I'm not really a fan of turboed EMDs for switching either. They don't always stay running when you go from idle to run 8 when switching. Not to mention the wear on the turbo clutches and gear train.
Mike WSOR engineer | HO scale since 1988 | Visit our club www.WCGandyDancers.com
WSOR 3801oltmannd(GP38s running flat out in road service always make me wince when I think about the fuel!) Sure does sound neat though.
oltmanndYeah, man!
My employer used to send us out with 2-3 GP38s, try to wind them out to 50 mph. This run is now handled pretty much exclusively by SD40-2s now.
UP runs a local job past my house with 2-6 GP38s lashed together. On a quiet night with a heavy train you can hear him coming 5-10 minutes before he gets here.
What about the 6 cylinder GEVO or the 8 cylinder 710 for passenger locomotives?
Do you really need 4200 HP for a 4-car corridor train? How about a low-horsepower but lightweight passenger locomotive, like the FM "Speed Merchant" that was tried out with Talgo train consists on the New Haven?
There are advantages to a lightweight locomotive in passenger service -- less impact on the rails, less side force on the rails if you are using them with Talgo or other tilt trains and running with high "cant deficiency." Since for a corridor trains it seems you need a non-revenue locomotive or cab car at each end for push pull and grade crossing protection, how about a 70 ton 2000 HP locomotive at each end instead of a 125 ton 4000 HP locomotive at one end and a ballasted 125 ton "cabbage car" at the other?
If GM "killed the electric car", what am I doing standing next to an EV-1, a half a block from the WSOR tracks?
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