This is truly interesting in a number of respects, but the most important detail here is what the different CV values produced at the engines. The steps might correspond to different engine activations in a Fell locomotive, but my understanding was that most 'genset' engines were designed around common, modular, sledded replacement genset units for maintenance. What were the individual engine settings at each of the indicated power notches?
Variable part of CV40-9i .
This was a means of load limiting these NR class locos to N1 or N6/N7/N8 .
LL1N was effectively putting the unit off line .
LL6 = 2850 Hp
LL7 = 3560 Hp
N8 = 4020 Hp .
With the Consist Moniter software you could apply these settings to the lead or up to five trailing NR units from the front seat .
At times it was useful to balance fuel levels between NR units , the consist moniter showed fuel levels of up to six NR units in the consist .
BaltACDSince the not in use fuel consumption of diesels, as they are being used today, is ZERO. I don't see how 'ready to go' steam can equal that fuel usage level.
Porta was one to carefully note things like first cost, degradation in service, and safe disposal of things like complex battery packs. (This is a bit ironic when you look at some of his other assumptions in locomotive design, but here it's solidly significant.) Steam offers almost unlimited cycling, very little degradation of materials, relatively little persistent pollution or recycling difficulties, etc.
BaltACDMy understanding of gen-set loading is that the 'next' engine doesn't fire up until some predetermined level of loading is reached on the engine(s) that are actively working.
This is, I think, part of where STCO's idea came in: when the engine loaded to 50% of current engine power with high commanded demand, a computer or PLC equivalent would start going through the start sequence for the lowest-time engine, and then progressively load it once its running had stabilized. By then the locomotive would be using some large percentage of the first engine capacity (as accelerated) and overall locomotive acceleration (against train resistance) thereby extended.
With a slow loading GE, the full power of the locomotive is available throughout the range of the throttle. With the genset it is more like a manual transmission automobile revving engine 1 to the limit of its power and loading before putting the next engine on line with a time lag between when the next engine is actually needed and when it actually produces power and loading.
As long as throttle lag is predictable, an engineer can deal with it.
Comments I have heard from engineers that operated gen-set was that there was no predictability in how the units responded to the throttle.
What would be ideal is the response from predicted engine preparation that completes just as the throttle is opened -- or from a 'steam reservoir' charged to adequate pressure, with allowable change in cutoff to suit greater or less acceleration at a given charge pressure. Getting this in a system with pollution-control-related latency is a matter of better predictors -- or the kind of 'anticipation system' I and others have described.
Paul Milenkovic BaltACD Paul Milenkovic I got it! Light-oil fired (or biomass-fired) steam. L. D. Porta had the idea that he could put up enough (exagerated, in his words) insulation along with the right kind of ashpan dampers and blower settings to get a steam locomotive to have lower standby fuel usage than a diesel. Steam switch engines were notorious for using much more fuel in proportion to a diesel than road engines, but Porta claimed he had that problem licked. I am not claiming this, he did. If you have the boiler near rated pressure, the power is near instantaneous? Since the not in use fuel consumption of diesels, as they are being used today, is ZERO. I don't see how 'ready to go' steam can equal that fuel usage level. Fuel consumption of diesels at standby may be zero, but it is reasonably argued to not be ZERO (in all caps). Much of the discussion here is if you have a genset unit and you "wipe the throttle", there is a substantial lag in getting the unit to "load", and even a turbo charged GE unit starting at idle has such a lag. I have never been at the throttle of a locomotive and not been at the throttle during switching, but Forum members who have are telling us that this lag makes many operations conducted during switching cumbersome.
BaltACD Paul Milenkovic I got it! Light-oil fired (or biomass-fired) steam. L. D. Porta had the idea that he could put up enough (exagerated, in his words) insulation along with the right kind of ashpan dampers and blower settings to get a steam locomotive to have lower standby fuel usage than a diesel. Steam switch engines were notorious for using much more fuel in proportion to a diesel than road engines, but Porta claimed he had that problem licked. I am not claiming this, he did. If you have the boiler near rated pressure, the power is near instantaneous? Since the not in use fuel consumption of diesels, as they are being used today, is ZERO. I don't see how 'ready to go' steam can equal that fuel usage level.
Paul Milenkovic I got it! Light-oil fired (or biomass-fired) steam. L. D. Porta had the idea that he could put up enough (exagerated, in his words) insulation along with the right kind of ashpan dampers and blower settings to get a steam locomotive to have lower standby fuel usage than a diesel. Steam switch engines were notorious for using much more fuel in proportion to a diesel than road engines, but Porta claimed he had that problem licked. I am not claiming this, he did. If you have the boiler near rated pressure, the power is near instantaneous?
L. D. Porta had the idea that he could put up enough (exagerated, in his words) insulation along with the right kind of ashpan dampers and blower settings to get a steam locomotive to have lower standby fuel usage than a diesel.
Steam switch engines were notorious for using much more fuel in proportion to a diesel than road engines, but Porta claimed he had that problem licked. I am not claiming this, he did.
If you have the boiler near rated pressure, the power is near instantaneous?
Since the not in use fuel consumption of diesels, as they are being used today, is ZERO. I don't see how 'ready to go' steam can equal that fuel usage level.
Fuel consumption of diesels at standby may be zero, but it is reasonably argued to not be ZERO (in all caps).
Much of the discussion here is if you have a genset unit and you "wipe the throttle", there is a substantial lag in getting the unit to "load", and even a turbo charged GE unit starting at idle has such a lag.
I have never been at the throttle of a locomotive and not been at the throttle during switching, but Forum members who have are telling us that this lag makes many operations conducted during switching cumbersome.
My understanding of gen-set loading is that the 'next' engine doesn't fire up until some predetermined level of loading is reached on the engine(s) that are actively working. Never having operated a gen-set I could be wrong.
With a slow loading GE, the full power of the locomotive is available throughout the range of the throttle. With the genset it is more like a manual transmission automobile reving engine 1 to the limit of its power and loading before putting the next engine on line with a time lag between when the next engine is actually needed and when it actually produces power and loading.
As long as throttle lag is predictable, an engineer can deal with it. Comments I have heard from engineers that operated gen-set was that there was no predictability in how the units responded to the throttle.
Never too old to have a happy childhood!
Paul MilenkovicFuel consumption of diesels at standby may be zero, but it is reasonably argued to not be ZERO (in all caps).
It is ZERO (by any practical measure) if the prime mover is shut down.
In practice this often does not happen, and the engine is left idling instead, but many air-quality management districts now have restrictions against such 'idling' for road vehicles, and those can and indeed should be applied to switch power during the time tractive effort from the particular prime mover isn't needed.
Maintaining some parameters when the engine is shut down from 'idling' may involve the use of energy, and this is sometimes provided (as in the Kim Hotstart) with combustion of diesel fuel. It is up to you to decide if you 'count' this as effective fuel burn.
Likewise there are pollution effects involved with starting locomotive prime movers, particularly EMD 2-strokes even where their water jackets are at proper temperature and they are 'pre-lubed' at cranking. One such start may emit the actual pollutants of many hours of idling the same powerplant. But this may not matter to twentysomething legislative aides crafting the final details of regulations or proposed/actual rulemaking.
In practice this would be handled much as it is in European cars of a certain age: you pre-pressurize (and if necessary preheat) the intake tract with sufficient mass flow that combustion starts right up with the first injection. Those who know something about internal-combustion engines will comment just how completely this 'works'.
The more important, or significant to lawmakers anyway, concern is that accelerating the engine without proper accommodation produces the same sort of 'overfuel' concerns, and in many designs this results in an artificially-slow (albeit sometimes carefully-ramped) acceleration to commanded speed. I have mentioned a fairly classic example, of a Volkswagen experiment back in the benighted Seventies where the throttle of what I recall to be a carbureted engine was dashpotted to retard WOT by something like 30 seconds. Driving this on California freeways was a true exercise in terror; driving it much anywhere was an exercise in enormous patience, much more so than driving nonturbo Mercedes diesel fours...
As noted, a good way to overcome this is to provide assistance spooling up or providing alternative boost to the intake tract; a couple of the electrical solutions including a couple with Satcon motors going back to the '80s being essentially OTS-level solutions. The key is to provide a business-related rationale for enabling very quick throttle following followed by very quick electrical loading, and the latter half of this is surprisingly well-established -- beyond the cost-effective capability of mechanical components or required demand, in some cases.
If GM "killed the electric car", what am I doing standing next to an EV-1, a half a block from the WSOR tracks?
For much of the year, diesel locomotives do consume fuel when sitting such as on the ready track at a major yard.
Even though the days of a locomotive having to stay on 24/7 is greatly diminished these days thanks to environmental concerns and the price of diesel, they're still burning diesel regularly.
On most modern road locomotives, the computers will regularly fire up the prime mover to warm the temperatures up before shutting back down (I believe SmartStart is the name of one such system).
And on many other locomotives such as many rebuilt Dash 2's rostered by all the Class 1's, they'll have an auxiliary power unit that will keep the water and oil warm (Which as I recall was all that was needed to upgrade such power to meet EPA's Tier 0).
Around my neck of the woods, a good half the year or so isn't in safe territory to leave a locomotive shut down without draining it (Let's say lows of no lower than 45 degrees).
Paul MilenkovicI got it! Light-oil fired (or biomass-fired) steam. L. D. Porta had the idea that he could put up enough (exagerated, in his words) insulation along with the right kind of ashpan dampers and blower settings to get a steam locomotive to have lower standby fuel usage than a diesel. Steam switch engines were notorious for using much more fuel in proportion to a diesel than road engines, but Porta claimed he had that problem licked. I am not claiming this, he did. If you have the boiler near rated pressure, the power is near instantaneous?
CSSHEGEWISCH Perhaps we could use some input from Peter as to how the variable horsepower NR class is working out in Australia.
Perhaps we could use some input from Peter as to how the variable horsepower NR class is working out in Australia.
I missed this reference, sorry.
I think the "v" in Cv40-9i was basically a system that allowed one of a pair of units to remain in an intermediate notch as a fuel saving measure.
I think it was a feature to encourage the purchaser to buy 4000 HP units when most existing units were 3000 HP. I think the intermediate point was set at 2850 HP.
No subsequent units had this feature and I'd be surprised if the "NR Class" still have the feature after a major rebuild a few years ago, which updated the electronics.
More than 200 4400HP GE AC units have been built since these units with no mention of variable horsepower.
Peter
I got it! Light-oil fired (or biomass-fired) steam.
SD70Dude If you really want to save fuel and cut down on noise from yard engines, I think a modernized Green Goat would be a good idea to explore, especially considering how far battery technology has come in the last 15 years.
If you really want to save fuel and cut down on noise from yard engines, I think a modernized Green Goat would be a good idea to explore, especially considering how far battery technology has come in the last 15 years.
Done right, one advantage of the Green Goat is that throttle response would be instantaneous, though it may be more accurate to say "controller response". With an AC traction motor, it would be easy to rapidly switch into regenerative braking.
IIRC, the Milwaukee strung some wire in the Deer Lodge switching district as then crews liked the "right now" response from the electric locomotives.
SD70DudeBTW, it doesn't really matter what type of defeat devices and interlocks you install to try and keep crews from messing with the units, we WILL find a way to get around them.
The key is to make the convenient acceleration fully "green" according to sensible criteria, and then make operations relevant to the capability. I would argue that had that been done with the Green Goat, 999, and other unsuccessful things, we'd have had a very different practical outcome from battery (or energy-storage) assisted power, particularly now that flat switching has become a hot and frequently-used thing again.
What I'm worried about is that a new generation of 'SPV-2000 designers' will apply automotive design and algorithms to railroad service as though it scaled. And you guys will have to get it in the neck, possibly for decades of misery, when it is relatively simple (at least in my opinion) to get many things very right.
I learned very early about the lesson of the Miller Train Control: if you're selling practical ATC, you don't sell it to bureaucrats, or publicity-hound safety departments, or penalizing middle management looking for more brownie point opportunities. You sell it to the people it makes safe, and enables better. And if it doesn't actually make them safe ... the thing needs redesign until it does.
I think the genset concept has turned out to be something like the EOT brake assist feature. A good idea in theory, but it turns out to have problems that aren't worth the time and effort to fix in the face of better alternatives, like AutoStop and smaller, turbocharged engines replacing all those old worn out roots-blown EMDs.
BTW, it doesn't really matter what type of defeat devices and interlocks you install to try and keep crews from messing with the units, we WILL find a way to get around them. And if we don't, productivity will drop because the unit won't work properly, and every little defect we can find will get reported, as we will look for any excuse to get rid of the POS and get another unit that actually does the job.
Greetings from Alberta
-an Articulate Malcontent
Now all of this presupposes that when you press the button or pull the ring enough times, you get all of those gensets powered up for a heavy pull.
From what people are saying about the gensets, that may not always be the case.
Paul MilenkovicDon't some of the hybrid cars have a "sport" and an "eco" setting?
The problem with any mode button is that you and I both know it would be left depressed all the time --- or there would be some damn edict about discipline if you left it depressed, or the computer would automatically deactivate it the next time the vigilance control alerted. Bureaucrats have ways to act when they think you're "circumventing the air pollution control" or whatever.
What I had in mind is like a ring you pull up, with a light that says it's been enabled and another light that says it's ready. Probably some kind of preset for speed or power, depending on what you want the additional 'drive capability' for. Think of it as a pollution-friendly hand throttle...
The predictive power increases can show up automagically, too, just as in the Carnegie-Mellon 'predictive cruise control'.
If the RPS commuter 'accelerator' does not have many of these features, someone is asleep at the switch, so to speak...
Interesting idea with the multiple presses to get more engines in the spool. I can see a display that works like that for heated seats -- one, two, and three bars of LED showing how many engines will cycle on following something like STCO's demand-following. Just toggle a bit more to change that number as desired... again as with the heated seats. And it could default to off as heated rear windows do, with an adjustable timer.
I recall taking the public tour of the Queen Mary berthed in Long Beach. We were taken into the turbine gallery of the engineering space of the ship, and we were played either a recording or a dramatization of the communication between Bridge and Engineering on avoiding a collision.
A stuffy upper-class English voice demands, "We need steam!", presumably to have enough to manuever around the hazard, and the reply comes with an undecipherable Scot's accent to which Star Trek actor James Doohan never came close. I would have laughed out loud were it not for not being rude in front of strangers.
Along the lines of a "trim throttle", the simple solution would be a big red button marked "We need steam!" for "kicking" cars or dragging a long cut. The locomotive engineer could press it multiple times to get all of the gensets to power up. After some time with the throttle at a reduced setting, the gensets could power down?
Don't some of the hybrid cars have a "sport" and an "eco" setting?
Shadow the Cats ownerThese engines have no direct connection between the throttle and the injection system its all done by electronic signals.
One likely difference is that OTR trucks necessarily have random throttle control; to have them 'load' the way, say, a GE FDL in a dash-9 does would be suicidal. But for each engine type there will be an ideal map for 'rate of speed change' (both for acceleration and deceleration) that provides least pollution; in my opinion there is also benefit in transiently unloading the 'generator' as the Diesel engine is physically increasing its rotational speed. Both these will benefit from anticipatory loading as you indicate, but I suspect in many cases you'd have many more starts and stops of engines over the course of a day -- this is less troublesome if you have tied the lube pressure together or use the Cat-style prelubing that uses the starter motor, and have preheated the engine with some combination of coolant circulation and oil heating, of course, but I suspect many railroads would still want to minimize the actual number of starts vs. equalizing out the number of engine-hours per prime mover even so. That is not difficult to integrate into FADEC programming, just that it is more involved than just starting new engines at 50% load as a general rule.
To me the important thing is predicting when you need the additional power and accomplishing the necessary start(s) and engine runup(s) with minimum pollution in the time before the crew wants the engine to pull or physically accelerate a load.
It is interesting to consider how a battery-enabled hybrid control balances using the rate of discharge and charge of the battery vs. acceleration and regenerative braking. There has been considerable work over the years in how hybrid automobiles 'built to a price' with the smallest possible battery capacity actively manage this -- and to me it's clear here, too, that prediction of loading greatly enhances the choice of use of the battery vs. combustion-engine progressive acceleration/deceleration or sequential startup.
On modern OTR truck engines which are what genset locomotives use for powerplants. These engines have no direct connection between the throttle and the injection system its all done by electronic signals. So if say the engineer puts the engine in notch 3 the second engine of the 3 starts then at 5 the last one fires up for use. It is all a matter of programming. Heck the shop here can change a 450hp engine into a 550 one with a couple of key strokes. Why it's all in the programming.
i think that Avon had two of them for use in the puller (Hump Bowl) operation and that the town of Avon provided some 'green' funding. I was told that they didn't play well together so each one was always paired with a 6-axle. Never heard that they left the yard.
"I find I don't remember if the gensets can MU with conventional power".
The CSX one I used to use could MU with conventional power. ( I don't remember who built it). We always had to take another unit along on a 20 mile round trip because the Genset was so unreliable, mainly because of computer problems.
Probably more fuel was burned hauling it back and forth to the shop than it ever saved in operation.
Mark Vinski
Shadow the Cats ownerLastly reprogramming the software on the engines so that whenever the engine that was last started reaches 50 percent load the next one starts up and comes online automatically instead of waiting till 100 percent.
There is one other sneaky system I didn't mention, but that those of you with Mercedes and BMWs will perhaps ruefully appreciate: the intake-tract charge air has to be fully pressurized (and heated) at the time any of the engines is cranked. That means that careful control over the running engine's boost, perhaps with careful use of heated brake air, needs to be used to provide each sequential additional engine with the right conditions before its own turbo has fully spooled up. (In new practice you might use one of the electric turbo setups, or additional electrical spooling of an exhaust-driven turbocharger, to accomplish this -- another of the good reasons to incorporate hybrid-style energy storage in a locomotive consist...)
The loading isn't fully progressive in the sense of opening notches on a typical 'time-delay' GE throttle. Now, if it were, your kind of proportioning would work at least as well ... but each engine will still have the same ramp-up to full power necessary for pollution control, which may be in the 20 to 30-second range. If this is sequentially taken up, the response may be ridiculously glacial ... with the risk that as soon as engines have been fired up and enter their acceleration and then load-down, the locomotive may no longer need the horsepower, and the corresponding deceleration to save pollution then has to be implemented...
The key is, where possible, to predict where the incremental horsepower would be needed -- or provide a different engine control that is proportionally pulled up to tell the engines to go to a particular "horsepower" ASAP, with an indication when they have approached that. I suspect that a crew 'kicking cars' would rapidly come to know the lags involved, and be able to predict when to run the engines up and down independent of the physical 'throttle' to accelerate and decelerate the locomotive.
This is one of those things, like having a second or 'trim' throttle on an unconjugated duplex-drive steam locomotive, that seems obvious if you actually want to run a multiple-motored locomotive efficiently, especially within the potentially arbitrary desired bounds set by pollution-control agencies and the like.
Sounds like a good use for the Cadillac 4/6/8 engine :)
If a genset is ever going to work in the railroad environment 3 then 3 systems must be combined on the entire set. First off is the cooling system so that the entire power package is kept warm. Second is the oiling system so there's always pressure in the non running engines. Lastly reprogramming the software on the engines so that whenever the engine that was last started reaches 50 percent load the next one starts up and comes online automatically instead of waiting till 100 percent.
Minor fuel savings at what cost? The power generation of a turbocharged engine is nearly linear from notch to notch, once you account for the "idle burden". So, the fuel savings is really the idle fuel - 2 to 3 gallons an hour. That's a lot of complexity to pay for such a small benefit.
If I was still in Equipment Engineering at the time these beasts came around, I'd have voted "NO!"
(Also, wasn't a fan of the AC6000s and SD90s when they first were offered. Too much new stuff in one box. Was a fan of SD80MACs though...)
-Don (Random stuff, mostly about trains - what else? http://blerfblog.blogspot.com/)
This deserves its own discussion:
creepycrankIf they have to operate them in tandem doesn't that defeat the purpose of having the power on each unit divided between 3 diesels?
There can be little doubt that, if a single genset locomotive is more flexible than a large single medium-speed engine, then a pair of them is far more so if operated in the equivalent of MU. I would expect it to be very rare that a given turn required the full power of two gensets substantially "all the time" rather than for particular parts of the profile or operating requirements ... with the lower combustion emissions, and perhaps 'wear and tear' on rotating machinery, etc., being lower at all other times the peak power wasn't needed -- although there might be sense in having a single efficient larger locomotive providing 'baseline' power from idle to Run 8 and the genset providing incremental power as with a more extensive version of the supplemental engine in the PR43.
I find I don't remember if the gensets can MU with conventional power.
Remember that the dream of adjusting power through 'just the right' combination of engines has been a will o'the wisp of designers -- wacky and good -- for many years. One of the express premises of the Baldwin Essl locomotive was that it could (more or less seamlessly, given the electrical connections) start and stop its 6000 nominal hp of power, in 750hp increments, depending on trailing load. This was 'not dissimilar' from the design premise of at least some of the gensets that only the necessary combustion power would be running at any given time, something probably of more interest to bureaucrats in places like SCAQMD or CARB, or bean-counting people responsible for fuel contracts, than actual railroaders trying to Run Trains.
Of course, in the late '30s, things like short-term pollution at start or restart, or mandatory long spoolup times for engine acceleration, would have been less significant. One thing about well-designed gensets was that they could share cooling loops, so if running on one engine, the other two could be kept at reasonable running temperature in the cooling jackets and engine structure and be more easily and less 'pollutingly' fired up; likewise the oil pressure on all the engines could be maintained, effectively as with a pre-lubing system, if any one engine were running, making it more practical to start, stop, and throttle them as "desired".
The great problem being that, as with the earlier generations of battery switcher, it appears that no one who understood how the locomotives would actually be used was involved in approving the final design.
One of the early comments I made to the Carnegie-Mellon 'integrated GIS' plan for autonomous fuel management was that it promised to make genset operation far more 'intuitive' to railroaders, as it could reasonably predict many types of increased power requirement and start and throttle-up engines as needed with less silly fribbling. Likewise, for flat switching there needed to be some 'advance' control, ideally of great simplicity, that when pulled would start the engines cycling on for maximal programmed acceleration and alert the engineer when 'ready' to be quickly loaded down. To my knowledge this was never implemented on the current range of gensets.
There are also potential issues with the source and design of the actual engines and 'gensets' used in these locomotives. To the extent they are sourced on OTR truck engines, with the vast wealth of horror literature regarding the smog equipment and expedient design (ahem, early-2000s Caterpillars?) in some generations of them, we could expect to see trouble x3 in a number of respects.
There have been a couple of other stabs at select-a-power in a single unit, the Cat PR43 being a particularly interesting example. This instead of having a buncha little prime movers had one big one, a C175 sized for 'average' use, and a little dozer-size C18 to be fired up either when higher peak horsepower or lower 'maintaining' horsepower was desired. If the cooling and oil systems were not interconnected, someone missed a stitch... particularly if an 'idle' or shut-down engine did not have hydrodynamic lubrication against road shock, something that might not be obvious to an OTR guy. This was an interesting and, to me, pretty-well-thought-out design -- but it does not seem to have caught on other than where PR30s were already in use.
In my opinion, a number of the design considerations used in the Budd RDCs (or the Essl locomotive) are (or ought to be) used on genset engines. Having the engine installation designed for easy maintenance is one; having the whole genset 'modular' for easy replacement without keeping the locomotive itself out of service is another. I of course would argue for using full SCR (with a little additional DEF to be paid for as for a fuel surcharge as an "environmental accommodation cost") for 100% of the NO reduction, thereby getting rid of the entire EGR boondoggle and perhaps the need for any sort of DPF kludge as well.
A proper battery/supercap hybrid gets rid of much of the 'predictive' issue with the genset instantaneous power accommodation, provided that someone who actually understands this type of power transmission has done the detail design. I am watching with great interest to see how the people in Fullerton manage to pull this off.
The front office likes them because they can show that the railroad is going "green". The purchasing agent likes them because its a new locomotive that somebody else is paying for. The shop forces like them because of all the overtime they get for keeping them running. The only group that does't like them are those that have to operate them.
If they have to operate them in tandum doesn't that defeat the purpose of having the power on each unit divided between 3 diesels ?
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