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Why not a loco that shuts off its engine while going down hill?

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Posted by CapeCamper on Monday, March 18, 2013 7:17 PM

Overmod

Jerry Pier
A gas turbine can be shut downwithout consequence and full power can be attained in 90 seconds on restart.

OH would UP disagree with you there!

If you don't have turning gear and USE IT, shaft sag will turn your pretty turbine into a mass of expensive scrap in a comparatively short time -- and as I recall UP found this out by experience.

Thermal cycling of the burners and cans, and clearances inside the engine, will not benefit from random startup and shutdown, even if you follow the 'recommended' autostart procedure.  (Not to mention what happens if you're using heavy oil and the lines to the turbine were'nt properly purged with diesel at shutdown, and things have cooled off a bit...)

AGREED!  Gas turbines (I run 6,000hp units regularly) would suffer from thermal shock and "rotor bow" (you called it "shaft sag") which is VERY hard on bearing structure.  Also starting an essentially cold gas turbine and going to anywhere near full power in 90 seconds would render it useless in a short period of time.

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Posted by CapeCamper on Monday, March 18, 2013 7:10 PM

i

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Posted by CapeCamper on Monday, March 18, 2013 6:57 PM

    That's a good question that energy-conscience people might ask.  It could work (with the right battery technology) for short trains on level ground where there are frequent stops (such as commuter trains) when the dynamic brake energy of each stop could be stored in batteries within the locomotive then delivered to the traction motors upon start-up.  However, with 6,000 ton trains descending long grades the dynamic brake energy storage would require a large warehouse full of batteries, and then some.   Equipping locomotives this way would limit their use to such trains and severely limit flexibility with the power pool. 

   In addition, frequent starting and shutting down of large diesel engines creates other issues that are not easily addressed.  Diesel engines use considerably less fuel at idle than similar sized gasoline engines so the fuel savings would be so marginal as to be off the radar.   Thermal stresses caused by shutting down an engine of this size just after climbing a grade, cresting a hill, then shutting it off on the other side would pretty dramatically shorten their lives if not cause outright failure.  

  Electrification is the only way to recover a useable quantity of energy from traction motors.  Power can be put back in the grid or used to help lift an opposing train climbing the hill, but the cost of that is nothing short of enormous... then there is the ongoing maintenance of catenary.   The mountain railroads that used electricification abandoned it many years ago.

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Posted by BaltACD on Monday, March 11, 2013 2:39 PM

efftenxrfe

Balt. Assistant chief dispr, "turning the key to start..." is the solution, and am I risking losing a patent (?) to the problem.

Suppose you're descending from the eastbound side of the Martinez bridge, or at Andesite in the shadow of Mt Shasta or crossing the river at Benson, Az.

What works, practical, legit, but not in the rulebook or train-handling guide, is to slam the db-control-lever to Off, slam the throttle to maximum power, stretching the train while the downgrade is shoving the mass towards the point (node) where the forces change.

It works, and it can't be a secret.

Turning the key to start would make this kind of train-handling work with gen-set's of all flavors. 

Key start (soft-ware) to have the gen-sets on the line, ready....prior to needing them....is that an impossible....

Present GenSets are for yard use - not road use.

Engineers I have discussed them with report they have no 'direct' control of the secondary gensets, they are started and stopped based on load the locomotive is pulling at any point in time.  It is next to impossible to 'kick' a car in switching, the time and distance it takes load the locomotive up to 'kicking speed' with a cut of cars makes this a ineffective swtiching technique.  When the throttle is closed, the secondary genset go off line and shut down as there is not 'demand' for their additional power, when the throttle is notched up and the load meter rises the gensets come back on line as necessary.  Engineers normally consider GE products to be slow to load - GE's are cheeta's in comparison to gensets. 

 As a result of this performance, gensets are not used for general yard switching, for the most part they are being utilized  for industrial switching in and around customer facilities - locations where cars are normally not 'switched' but are shoved to precise spoting locations and/or couplings - with and without air.

Personally, I view genset development to be at the stage of the EMD FT demonstrators, ie barely scratching the surface of the technology.  Time, money and effort should improve their performance.

 

 

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Posted by rfpjohn on Saturday, February 23, 2013 7:30 PM

I have enough trouble trying to figure out if and when the big GEs are going to bestow some power when I open the throttle coming out of a dip! At one time, back in the early 80's some RF&P loco's had some sort of selector system with which the engineer could isolate trailing units. I believe it was on our GP40-2's (141-147). It seemed like a pretty good idea, except that the GP35's which frequently trailed had a bad habit of not loading after being put back on line. I know things have advanced tremendously, (too far for my taste) but I seriously doubt that a unit that shuts down on descending grades could be made responsive enough to meet the demands of real world train handling. As for GPS feed, we now have GE's trip optimizer which has some whiz-bang technology to run our trains absent brains. At best it gives a vanilla performance. Letting it go through it's fumbling attempt to get down the road makes my skin crawl. I know it's the future, but I find it near impossible to swallow! I guess I'm getting too old and grouchy, or perhaps I take too much personal pride in my job. OK that rant took me way off course.

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Posted by efftenxrfe on Friday, February 22, 2013 7:45 PM

Balt. Assistant chief dispr, "turning the key to start..." is the solution, and am I risking losing a patent (?) to the problem.

Suppose you're descending from the eastbound side of the Martinez bridge, or at Andesite in the shadow of Mt Shasta or crossing the river at Benson, Az.

What works, practical, legit, but not in the rulebook or train-handling guide, is to slam the db-control-lever to Off, slam the throttle to maximum power, stretching the train while the downgrade is shoving the mass towards the point (node) where the forces change.

It works, and it can't be a secret.

Turning the key to start would make this kind of train-handling work with gen-set's of all flavors. 

Key start (soft-ware) to have the gen-sets on the line, ready....prior to needing them....is that an impossible....

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Posted by Overmod on Friday, February 22, 2013 7:11 PM

BaltACD
The starting and stopping of prime movers in railroad locomotives is not the simple act of turning the key to start your Chevy or Honda.

We are discussing genset engines.  These are no more involved than large truck engines ... or someone very stupid has done the systems integration.  Even the large 'railroad' style Caterpillar 20-cylinder engines should fall in this category.  True, it is not 'turn the key like a car' -- but then, neither are most diesel cars...

I assure you that GPS add-ons to PTC are well in hand, and will interface with all the various kinds of hybrid and modular-power locomotives now being developed.  This is most certainly not Popular Science grade engineering or development.  (Whether or not the equipment is 'currently in production' is of minor importance to future PTC implementation as I expect a number of aspects of that system to change within the next year or so)

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Posted by BaltACD on Friday, February 22, 2013 6:45 PM

Overmod

BaltACD
Just ask a engineer that uses a multi-engine Genset locomotive how quickly it loads up to full power when full power is required, as each additional prime mover has to fire and then come up to power in sequence.

Yeah, but any proper Genset consist will either be GPS-aware of the track profile, much as DPU units can be, and bring modules on line, stabilize them, and load them down well in time to suit the track profile.

Barring that -- a sensible engineer would know how long the 'latency' of his additional engines would be, and just pre-actuate them, no different in principle from how you modulate the brakes to keep the train slack right when running over undulating road...

Andof course, if it's *that* much of an issue, no one said the engines of a hybrid consist HAVE to be shut down when idling -- even the EPA regs on idling only involve the situation when trucks are not moving.  While I don't recommend it for diesels, you could implement alternate-cylinder firing to keep the engines spun up and cylinders hot on minimum fuel; this would produce loading within about 20 revolutions of resumption of fueling...

Meanwhile:  How many gensets in a given CONSIST need to be running to provide power for dynamic braking on all axles in that consist?  Bet it's not many...

Railroads are not operating on Popular Mechanics what it will be like in the future with GPS track profiles, while some elementry aspects of such technology are being 'played' with in a testing enviornment there is nothing in 'production'.  Present day Genset's fire up power on load demand - not enough load the additional engines don't fire up.  This is one reason why Gensets are not being used for line of road movements.  The I am aware of, Gensets, at least on my carrier are not equipped for dynamic braking.

The starting and stopping of prime movers in railroad locomotives is not the simple act of turning the key to start your Chevy or Honda.

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Posted by Overmod on Friday, February 22, 2013 12:45 PM

BaltACD
Just ask a engineer that uses a multi-engine Genset locomotive how quickly it loads up to full power when full power is required, as each additional prime mover has to fire and then come up to power in sequence.

Yeah, but any proper Genset consist will either be GPS-aware of the track profile, much as DPU units can be, and bring modules on line, stabilize them, and load them down well in time to suit the track profile.

Barring that -- a sensible engineer would know how long the 'latency' of his additional engines would be, and just pre-actuate them, no different in principle from how you modulate the brakes to keep the train slack right when running over undulating road...

Andof course, if it's *that* much of an issue, no one said the engines of a hybrid consist HAVE to be shut down when idling -- even the EPA regs on idling only involve the situation when trucks are not moving.  While I don't recommend it for diesels, you could implement alternate-cylinder firing to keep the engines spun up and cylinders hot on minimum fuel; this would produce loading within about 20 revolutions of resumption of fueling...

Meanwhile:  How many gensets in a given CONSIST need to be running to provide power for dynamic braking on all axles in that consist?  Bet it's not many...

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Posted by BaltACD on Friday, February 22, 2013 6:58 AM

Just ask a engineer that uses a multi-engine Genset locomotive how quickly it loads up to full power when full power is required, as each additional prime mover has to fire and then come up to power in sequence.

rfpjohn
Having the prime mover shut down going down hills sounds like a major train handling headache to me. I run in undualating territory, where you change from power to drifting/braking very frequently. I can't imagine a system which could crank the engine and have power available in anywhere near as quick as typical train handling demands. Might work on some of those super long grades out west if you overcome the cooling fan and air compressor problems.

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Posted by rfpjohn on Thursday, February 21, 2013 4:42 PM

Having the prime mover shut down going down hills sounds like a major train handling headache to me. I run in undualating territory, where you change from power to drifting/braking very frequently. I can't imagine a system which could crank the engine and have power available in anywhere near as quick as typical train handling demands. Might work on some of those super long grades out west if you overcome the cooling fan and air compressor problems.

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Posted by Overmod on Tuesday, February 19, 2013 5:22 PM

Paul Milenkovic
For example, one could use an electric motor to turn the turbine at a slower rate than a self-sustaining idle on turbine power ...

That is exactly what the turning gear does (NOTE:  it's 'gear' in the sense of apparatus, not 'gears' in the sense of things with teeth on them, although the turning on steam turbines is usually done with gears).  For shaft sag the required turnover speed is really quite slow, IIRC on the order of 2-3 rpm for the early series (someone look at the reference books and insert the correct value here -- it is in there, I just don't remember it)

... and one could have some kind of pilot light in the combustion cans to keep the turbine at some desired temperature

With the turning gear, there's no need for that -- and a good thing, too, because if your compressor isn't turning there is nothing blowing the fire through the cans anyway...

You shut the turbine off when not using it, following the automated shutdown sequence (described in a couple of references, including iianm Classic Trains a few years ago) and then put it on the turning gear.  Doesn't matter if it gets cold -- the automated STARTUP sequence (which I remember as being a bit longer than 90 seconds to develop working power state, but again it's in the references) is spec'd for cold start anyway.  Remember to purge your fuel lines any time you shut the turbine down, even for a short period!

Better check the fuel consumption on an idling turbine.  Compressor and all, ifuel consumption will be relatively high even at 'low power' because you'll have to maintain necessary rpm with the compression loss scaled to rpm.  In a different context, a bit like "saving" fuel by "idling" a diesel that can't be slowed because it's running inline HEP...

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Posted by Paul Milenkovic on Tuesday, February 19, 2013 5:03 PM

If it is important to idle a turbine at lower fuel flow, that could be built into the design.

For example, one could use an electric motor to turn the turbine at a slower rate than a self-sustaining idle on turbine power, and one could have some kind of pilot light in the combustion cans to keep the turbine at some desired temperature.

I had read in an Aviation Week article many years back on the French Turboliners used by Amtrak that they would put the turbine in one power car at idle and use the second power car turbine to run to train at cruise speed -- that was said to save fuel over running both turbines at part load.  Maybe Jerry could weigh in, but maybe that turbine design had such a low-fuel idle setting .

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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Posted by Overmod on Tuesday, February 19, 2013 4:56 PM

erikem
Airliners typically shut their engines down when arriving at the gate and I don't recall seeing any jet engines equipped with turning gears

I don't have my gas-turbine reference at hand to give you specifics, but there ARE spin-down parameters for aircraft turbines, if for no other reason than heat soak in the bearing lube. 

Yes, most of these turbines are very, very short compared to the ones used in the GE locomotives, and use better modern alloys and fabrication techniques, too.  If I remember correctly the wheel section of the PT6 is only two stages in the power turbine.  Helped to split the compressor turbine into sections,, too...

Will give better detail when I can.

RME

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Posted by Overmod on Tuesday, February 19, 2013 4:52 PM

oltmannd
That is exactly what RRs do.  In fact, some have installed auto-start and APUs to allow the diesel engine to shut down when it's not needed.

Don, I think you might want to make clear that the engine HAS to be running when the locomotive is in DB.  The 'regenerated' current is not used in the fields or controllers (or, at least in my experience, the fans) -- all of it goes to the resistance.  That is why you have to advance the throttle to a specified notch when in DB...

Please fill in full correct operating details for modern power...

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Posted by carnej1 on Tuesday, February 19, 2013 11:16 AM

episette

It would be more efficient to store the electrical energy being created by both the prime mover and the dynamics in a battery that would then be used to assist the train ascend the next hill. The GE hybrid locomotive stores the dynamic brake energy in batteries that are located between the frame rails, but I'm not sure if it also stores the electrical energy from the prime mover.  

 

I had an idea to also store the energy in batteries from non-hybrid locomotive to allow locomotives as old as  SD40-2s  to operate as hybrids.  I did a patent search  and I learned that GE already holds this patent but to my knowledge this has never been developed.

Railpower also holds similiar patents and there were some "Green Goat" slugs that operated on the principal you describe but IINM, they were all withdrawn from service due (like all green goats) to battery issues..

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Posted by oltmannd on Tuesday, February 19, 2013 8:42 AM

Rails West

I was wondering, why don't they design a locomotive that shuts down its diesel engine while the locomotive is descending a long grade in dynamic braking mode.  It seems like that would save fuel.  Or is reality more complicated than that?

I think what you are getting at is why should the engine idle during periods of time when it could be shut down?

That is exactly what RRs do.  In fact, some have installed auto-start and APUs to allow the diesel engine to shut down when it's not needed.

However, while the train is moving, you pretty much need the diesel engine running - for a whole bunch of reasons, most of them already discussed.

-Don (Random stuff, mostly about trains - what else? http://blerfblog.blogspot.com/

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Posted by erikem on Monday, February 18, 2013 11:51 PM

I think Jerry was referred to "aero derived" gas turbines as opposed to industrial turbines. Airliners typically shut their engines down when arriving at the gate and I don't recall seeing any jet engines equipped with turning gears (which are mandatory for large steam turbines). IIRC, the turbines used in the Big Blows were based on stationary gas turbines and not cores from jet engines (i.e. aero derived).

- Erik

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Posted by Overmod on Monday, February 18, 2013 8:29 PM

Jerry Pier
A gas turbine can be shut downwithout consequence and full power can be attained in 90 seconds on restart.

OH would UP disagree with you there!

If you don't have turning gear and USE IT, shaft sag will turn your pretty turbine into a mass of expensive scrap in a comparatively short time -- and as I recall UP found this out by experience.

Thermal cycling of the burners and cans, and clearances inside the engine, will not benefit from random startup and shutdown, even if you follow the 'recommended' autostart procedure.  (Not to mention what happens if you're using heavy oil and the lines to the turbine were'nt properly purged with diesel at shutdown, and things have cooled off a bit...)

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Posted by beaulieu on Sunday, September 4, 2011 2:20 PM

So where does the excitation of the traction motor fields come from?

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Posted by Rader Sidetrack on Friday, September 2, 2011 12:03 AM

A running diesel engine is not required to operate the air compressor, or any other "parasitic" loads, with an appropriate locomotive design. With Brookeville Locomotive's CoGeneration (2100 hp) locomotive, all energy generated by the traction motors in dynamic braking mode is available to power any/all loads on the locomotive, including the air compressor.  So I believe that this locomotive could qualify for the thread title, " a loco that shuts off its engine while going down hill."   You can read more about this locomotive here:

http://www.brookvilleequipment.com/pdffiles/CoGenerationBrochure.pdf

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Posted by LaurenFan on Wednesday, August 31, 2011 2:05 AM

Don't you need the engine block to power the air compressor for air braking?

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Posted by Leo_Ames on Friday, August 26, 2011 7:04 PM

It's my understanding that the PR43C isn't built to really be working alongside things like NS's Dash 9 and GEVO fleets in heavy duty road service. But rather, for things like road duty on secondary lines, serving as heavy power in local services, etc. All situations where you frequently wouldn't need all 3600 or 4,300 hp online and could get by with just 700hp online a substantial amount of the time.

I believe that the manufacturer even labels this model as a  "medium" duty locomotive.

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Posted by Jerry Pier on Thursday, August 25, 2011 2:05 PM

To provide air for the brake system, as well as other things, the air compressors, direct driven or motor driven. must run. You could use an auxiliary engine driven air compressor that would use less fuel but diesel fuel consumption at idle or low notch positions is so low it hardly seems worth it. On a gas turbine powered locomotive the separate air compressor would be a natural solutions since turbine idling fuel consumption is high. A gas turbine can be shut downwithout consequence and full power can be attained in 90 seconds on restart.

JERRY PIER
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Posted by EMD#1 on Thursday, August 25, 2011 1:02 PM

I use dynamic brakes to stop my train everyday.  Hi-Adhesion Extended Dynamic Brakes will bring a train to a complete stop unless conditions warrant otherwise.

Thanks, 

Tim

NS Locomotive Engineer

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Posted by carnej1 on Monday, August 22, 2011 8:59 PM

Leo_Ames

 jscheef:

Sounds like a good argument for gensets in larger road locomotives.

Jim

 

Nope

Gensets are an advantage in things like local and switching service because you rarely need maximum power and spend much of your time at idle or using a fraction of the unit's horsepower, so having multiple engines that allow partial shutdown under those circumstances is an advantage.

Out on the road on a mainline freight, you'd often be using all the power you have available. And the most fuel efficient way to provide that is with a single diesel engine in each locomotive. Gensets get away with less fuel efficient powerplants because the majority of the time they're operating, they're only using a fraction of the total horsepower available to the unit.

So a three engine Genset, like Railpower's RP20BD, rarely will actually have all three engines online. When it does have all three engines operating and outputing 2000hp, it's less fuel efficient than a modern, single engined, 2000hp locomotive.

The advantage comes from the fact that most of the time due to the type of service they're in, a 3 engine Genset will just have 1 or 2 of it's engines operating. That's where the efficiency comes from. A large road locomotive wouldn't benefit since it would spend much of it's time with all engines online burning more fuel. So if we see any changes, it's going to be a shift towards things like GE's Evolution hybrid prototype that captures previously wasted dynamic braking energy in a bank of batteries that then gets used when the engineer throttles up to increase fuel efficiency.

 The new PR43C units that NS is buying from Progress Rail are, in fact, "Road Gensets" but most of the power comes from the large (3600 HP) primary engine/alternator with a smaller 700 HP genset providing power only at higher loads as well as for hostling with the "big engine" shut down..

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Progress_Rail_PR43C

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Posted by challenger3980 on Sunday, August 21, 2011 1:10 PM

 So it's best to count on your air brakes as your primary means of stopping a train.

 

If STOPPING your train is your concern, then the air brakes are your only option, as dynamic brakes will only SLOW a train, NOT stop a train.

 

Doug

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Posted by challenger3980 on Sunday, August 21, 2011 1:07 PM

Thomas 9011,

 The derailment you are thinking of was commonly known as the "Duffy Street Incident" in San Bernadino, CA. Wikipedia has an informative article titled " San Bernardino train disaster". The cargo was listed as "Trona", I don't know how, or if Trona differs from potash. the trains weight was mis-calculated, and of 6 locomotives only two had working dynamic brakes, which was unknown to the engineer.

Doug

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Posted by Thomas 9011 on Friday, August 19, 2011 10:50 PM

There was a bad derailment on the Southern pacific in California either in the 80's or 90's where a train loaded with pot ash derailed. ff I remember right it had over 100 cars and they all derailed. The locomotives and many cars ended up demolishing peoples houses around a curve.

From what I remember many of the locomotives overheated and automatically shut down. When the locomotives shut down they lost the dynamic braking and could not stop it on air alone. I believe that train was going close to 100 mph when it hit that cure.

Shutting down a locomotive going down a hill would be a good idea as there are some very long hills(the Moffat route in Colorado is all almost all downhill from the Moffat tunnel to Denver). There is one big problem though,and that is locomotives drive the air compressor with the engine(I believe they have electric air compressors on locomotives now that are not driven by the engine but I am not sure).

With out the engine running you would not be running a air compressor and it wouldn't take long to lose your air and lose control of your train. Even with dynamic braking it can only take so much of a load over a period of time before you start to melt the traction motor cables. So it's best to count on your air brakes as your primary means of stopping a train.

On a side note when the Milwaukee road used to coast their electric locomotives down a big hill,they turned their electric motors into generators pumping electric right back into the grid. People used to say "a train going down a hill is powering another one coming up the hill".

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