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PRR Duplexes and Experimental Engines ( S1, S2, T1, Q1, V1 etc.)

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Posted by djlivus on Monday, April 26, 2021 8:48 AM

https://i.imgur.com/7yW84y7.png

https://i.imgur.com/gIMTLeg.png

the elongated body gg1 style turbine - if it is the succesor of the three-unit steam turbo electric locomotive project - it seems to be also a turbo electric locomotive design

 

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Posted by Jones1945 on Thursday, April 22, 2021 9:39 AM

djlivus

Could you post the images now unvailable, again? Kind regards 

Welcome to the forum! Please check PM, thanks a lot!

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Posted by Overmod on Wednesday, April 21, 2021 12:32 PM

djlivus
There are any drawings for the turbo-electric version of V1 locomotive?

I don't think the PRR version of the V1 (with the Bowes drive, which is not turbo-electric but more like an electromagnetic transmission on the mechanical drive) advanced as far as detail design.  The turbo-electric version was N&W, between 1950 and 1952; I have not yet determined how much detail work was done on that version, or when they changed to the chain-grate boiler (which as I recall -- but better check the original sources -- was different from the arrangement for the Baldwin-Westinghouse TE-1).

I don't believe Steins 'triplex' turbo-electric, which would have been much longer, is greatly related to the V1 chassis, which was designed around two turbines with mechanical drive to the axles.

 

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Posted by djlivus on Wednesday, April 21, 2021 8:21 AM

Could you post the images now unvailable, again? Kind regards

 

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Posted by djlivus on Wednesday, April 21, 2021 5:55 AM

There are any drawings for the turbo-electric version of V1 locomotive?

 

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Posted by Overmod on Sunday, April 11, 2021 12:56 AM

They built three with different approaches to power as a comparison test.  One had reciprocating engines and one a reduction-gear turbine arrangement.

Supposedly the original proposal came from Fessenden circa 1908.  Surely he would not have designed a twin-screw ship with both motors constrained to turn at the same speed!

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Posted by Flintlock76 on Saturday, April 10, 2021 2:20 PM

CSSHEGEWISCH

It's most interesting that the "Jupiter" was the US Navy's first turbo-electric drive when you consider its subsequent history.

 

I'd guess the "Jupiter," later "Langley" had that turbo-electric drive installed as a bit of an experiment.  If it didn't live up to expectations a collier was a lot less expensive as a test bed than a battleship.

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Posted by CSSHEGEWISCH on Saturday, April 10, 2021 10:27 AM

It's most interesting that the "Jupiter" was the US Navy's first turbo-electric drive when you consider its subsequent history.

The daily commute is part of everyday life but I get two rides a day out of it. Paul
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Posted by Erik_Mag on Friday, April 9, 2021 11:42 PM

Overmod

Meanwhile, while we are thinking about straight turbo electric drive, I believe there was a brief fad in the U.S.Navy early on for electric-transmission drive in warships.  Probably discussed on-line in sufficient detail to confirm.

Interest in turbo-electric  drives started prior to WW1, with, IIRC, the first installation being the collier "Jupiter". Motivation for using T-E drive was allowing the use of high speed turbines, more flexible machinery arrangement and improved maneuverability. Development of high speed reduction gears in late 20's and early 30's led to the USN going that route with the naval build-up starting in the mid 30's.

Experience with building light weight high power steam turbines for desroyers may have been the inspiration for GE building the "Turbomotives" in the late 30's.

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Posted by Juniatha on Thursday, April 8, 2021 10:25 PM

Overmod,

 

interesting now that you posted details of the Bowes drive. However, as for electric traction, the interest is more historical than it has any practical relevance today since with the Synchron / asynchron technology time has gone on over it.

As for a steam turbine drive, the gears today possible with automatic gear change and torque converter would again cover its range of advantageous application.

=J=

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Posted by M636C on Thursday, April 8, 2021 9:22 PM

daveklepper

It appears to me to be a form of generator and motor within common electrical and magnetic circuits, and thus harks back to the rotary 3-phase AC to DC rotary converters used in some original electrifications' locomotives, including the three-phase, double-wire Via Alpina Sondrio - Tirano in Italy.

 

Dave,

To me, the difference is that the converters you describe had electrical current as the both the input and the output, one AC and one DC.

The Bowes drive is the equivalent of a mechanical torque converter, such as a Voith hydraulic torque converter, in that the input and output are mechanical rotating shafts turning at different speeds with different torques.

In Italy, there were fairly commonly seen simpler three phase locomotives that simply varied the number of poles on the motor and had maybe two or three constant speeds. I travelled behind these as late as 1974 and I think they were more common than the locomotives with rotary converters. In 1974, there were many connections with the later 3000v DC system where arrangements had to be made to change engines, requiring a DC locomotive to be moved clear from its train by an AC locomotive after coasting into the station, or vice versa.

In England there were London underground trains with a form of stepless control called a "Metadyne" which was effectively a motor generator set that provided a variable voltage output. These dated from the mid 1930s, but were replaced by conventional camshaft control in the late 1940s and early 1950s.

Peter

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Posted by Overmod on Thursday, April 8, 2021 6:51 AM

Again: Normandie (and Morro Castle and other prospective ships of that era) had conventional turbo-electric drive, not Bowes drive.

From what I have read, the Bowes drive was intended particularly as a tugboat drive, where very fast reversals at high speed and load are required for what may be long periods of time.

I'm sure some idea of actual installations, together with aspects of their detail design, are in the Bowes papers at ISM; the published finding aid strongly indicates that there are.  I am checking regularly to see when they reopen access, as I have a list of box references literally printed out and sitting on my desk ready to go when they do...

It'll be interesting to see how the design for rail cars differs from that for the 2000hp high-speed locomotive.  Since I have seen what Bowes sent to the PRR, I do expect comparable engineering detail to be present.  

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Posted by daveklepper on Thursday, April 8, 2021 6:26 AM

Other than the Normandy, where-else was the Bowers Drive  used?

It appears to me to be a form of generator and motor within common electrical and magnetic circuits, and thus harks back to the rotary 3-phase AC to DC rotary converters used in some original electrifications' locomotives, including the three-phase, double-wire Via Alpina Sondrio - Tirano in Italy.

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Posted by M636C on Thursday, April 8, 2021 4:55 AM

Sara T

Sorry, Overmod, you didn't write it is accessible in the internet and so I didn't think of it. Looks like I should have thought of it anyway.

And on your later posting:  ah-haa! there it is!  Fine, thank you, wow, great, I'll tell Juni! Now I hope everything will become well!

>>A couple of college boys went to the engine room, doped out how to pull the levers, and ensured the ship was beached.  As I recall this saved lives.<<

They were from your class, Prof Overmod? Smile

Sara 05003

 

 

SS Morro Castle (1930) - Wikipedia

It was 87 years ago....

Peter

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Posted by Sara T on Thursday, April 8, 2021 1:53 AM

(deleted, forget it!)

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Posted by Overmod on Wednesday, April 7, 2021 9:12 PM

The Bowes drive is very different from turbo-electric, which is not really different from what diesel-electrics do.

Look first at patent 2465006A

https://patentimages.storage.googleapis.com/3f/e0/fe/67f4a9eaa3f7ab/US2465006.pdf

and then at the 'improvement' patented in 1955, paying attention to some of the discussion there

https://patentimages.storage.googleapis.com/56/04/1d/232aa9a0107ee7/US2715689.pdf

Note the efficiency of conversion, observed to be very much greater than 'turboelectric' as in, say, the Heilmann locomotive with its progressive losses.

A locomotive's turbine governor can then be designed principally to control spoolup and spindown for best longevity of the turbine, using the multiple nozzles most efficiently as load comes on and off once operating shaft rpm is reached, and keep the turbine in the range of its most efficient steam consumption with simple speed following, while allowing varying the road speed by modulating the drive.

Meanwhile, while we are thinking about straight turbo electric drive, I believe there was a brief fad in the U.S.Navy early on for electric-transmission drive in warships.  Probably discussed on-line in sufficient detail to confirm.

There is an interesting story about how easy operating a large turbo-electric drive could be.  As I recall the details, during the fire aboard the Morro Castle, the crew made no attempt to get the ship near the shore.  A couple of college boys went to the engine room, doped out how to pull the levers, and ensured the ship was beached.  As I recall this saved lives.

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Posted by Flintlock76 on Wednesday, April 7, 2021 4:57 PM

Probably not the same thing, and probably I'm way off, but the Bowes drive sounds very similar to what the French used in the Normandie,  that is, a turbo-electric drive.

The ship's steam turbines ran generators which in turn powered electric motors that turned the propeller shafts.  It was a lot easier and simpler to build the propulsion system that way than it was to utilize a complicated gearing system. 

Whether the ship went forward or in reverse was a simple matter of throwing switches.

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Posted by Jones1945 on Wednesday, April 7, 2021 12:04 AM

In case you missed it, I posted this on the second page of this thread one year ago: 

"Archived Photos of Chesapeake and Ohio M-1 Steam Turbine Engines"

http://cs.trains.com/ctr/f/3/t/278688.aspx?page=2#3221257

 

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Posted by Overmod on Tuesday, April 6, 2021 6:18 PM

Sara T
>>A specific point made about Bowes drive<< I had asked you to explain what it was, but got no answer. In a byline I mentioned your Bowes drive when talking to Juni, and what do you know? she told me she had also asked you about it earlier .. and got no answer neither.

Aside from some information in a PM sent directly to you, I have repeatedly posted about this, linked and discussed the patents and information at the Hagley and at ISM, gone on and on about the ways in which the approach could be used... and much of this is only a short community search away, which works just as nicely "from Germany" as it does from anywhere here.

Sara T
It appears to me that's your method: putting up things you know other members cannot comply to, like here you ask me: >>Sara, see if you can pull up the list of John Herbst papers in the repository of the University of Texas CEM.<< You know pretty well I live in Germany and it's absolutely safe and clear I will not come to that University and will never look up those papers or whatever I will find there.

Is it a German characteristic, like driving in traffic, first to ignore that an online repository of downloadable papers is, in fact, an Internet resource, accessible without download or journal costs through the CEM Web site ... and then to mock someone for pointing them at a free resource to multiple things of (at least potentially) fairly direct relevance to ALPS design?  I am frankly beginning to become irritated at being wrongly and belittlingly judged on entirely artificial and really rather irrelevant criteria and then considered to be lying based on it.  Were I to do what you just did to me to Juni I could expect an extremely fiery response.

Nearest I can find to the CEM index page as I last used it is here:

https://repositories.lib.utexas.edu/handle/2152/29970/recent-submissions

I have no idea where or if the ALPS-specific papers are in this, but it will give you at least an idea of some of the underlying work.  At least some of the titles, although not obviously hyperlinked, click through to PDF download links.

I will assume that your sarcasm means that you are actually interested in the Bowes drive and in reading papers from CEM respectively, and send you information via PM later when I have better access to the material and can forward attachments and not just links.

 

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Posted by Sara T on Tuesday, April 6, 2021 3:53 PM

(deleted, forget it!)

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Posted by BaltACD on Monday, April 5, 2021 1:59 PM

Overmod
Remember that you are looking at the result of impact of a string of hopper cars, accelerating to over 8mph at impact, oriented directly along the turbine shaft axis while it was spooled up.  It is difficult to think of an incident that would similarly stress the S2 main turbine.  It is entirely possible that a continued series of unrecognizedly-severe shocks might produce repeated stick-slip damage in the turbine bearings, but it was my understanding that periodic teardown and inspection revealed no evidence of that kind of damage.

A specific point made about Bowes drive in the 'revised' V1 was that it allowed longitudinal compliance of the main turbine if shocked in buff or draft.  As the Bowes drive is inherently noncontact there is relatively little tendency for reflected shock from the chassis to affect the turbine's internal structure; at least theoretically the primary and secondary suspension can be built to control off-axis shock, nothing involving control modality or construction not achievable by the late '40s.

Today of course you'd isolate the turbogenerator along the principles of a multiaxis tuned mass damper to help with vehicle stability, and use proper magnetic bearings.  The whole of the high-speed drive need be no more than was implemented on the first generation of TGV; of course far better and more sophisticated options are currently (no pun intended) available basically OTS for electrical transmission.  At least technically you could use a turbine in place of the expander in the Lewty booster, which can be aligned and shockproofed to a substantial extent.  Mechanical transmission design need be nowhere as sophisticated as in modern automobiles, as there is no requirement either to run in constant mesh or to transmit load across ratio changes.   As I pointed out some years ago, a magnetorheological coupling of suitable power for V1 use was theoretically available by late 1948; this has very little wear (and most of that in easily-replaced, non-dimensionally-critical components) and is easily proportionally controlled.

Keep in mind that this is Classic Trains, where there is a 50-year cutoff on the technology we're 'supposed' to discuss.  It is interesting to look back on what STE designs even by the early '70s could feature, both in materials and operation... both 'pro' and 'con'.

But as a quick note: Sara, see if you can pull up the list of John Herbst papers in the repository of the University of Texas CEM.  The MegaGen developed for SDI applications is a suitable design for high-speed locomotives; it was the basis for both CEM's and my ALPS locomotives back in the day the United States actually still cared about true high-speed design... 

Remember railroads consider 4 MPH a SAFE coupling speed for freight equipment.  Depending on the engineer and conditions, higher speed couplings are frequently made.  Impact is reality in the operation of locomotives.

Never too old to have a happy childhood!

              

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Posted by Overmod on Monday, April 5, 2021 12:03 PM

Remember that you are looking at the result of impact of a string of hopper cars, accelerating to over 8mph at impact, oriented directly along the turbine shaft axis while it was spooled up.  It is difficult to think of an incident that would similarly stress the S2 main turbine.  It is entirely possible that a continued series of unrecognizedly-severe shocks might produce repeated stick-slip damage in the turbine bearings, but it was my understanding that periodic teardown and inspection revealed no evidence of that kind of damage.

A specific point made about Bowes drive in the 'revised' V1 was that it allowed longitudinal compliance of the main turbine if shocked in buff or draft.  As the Bowes drive is inherently noncontact there is relatively little tendency for reflected shock from the chassis to affect the turbine's internal structure; at least theoretically the primary and secondary suspension can be built to control off-axis shock, nothing involving control modality or construction not achievable by the late '40s.

Today of course you'd isolate the turbogenerator along the principles of a multiaxis tuned mass damper to help with vehicle stability, and use proper magnetic bearings.  The whole of the high-speed drive need be no more than was implemented on the first generation of TGV; of course far better and more sophisticated options are currently (no pun intended) available basically OTS for electrical transmission.  At least technically you could use a turbine in place of the expander in the Lewty booster, which can be aligned and shockproofed to a substantial extent.  Mechanical transmission design need be nowhere as sophisticated as in modern automobiles, as there is no requirement either to run in constant mesh or to transmit load across ratio changes.   As I pointed out some years ago, a magnetorheological coupling of suitable power for V1 use was theoretically available by late 1948; this has very little wear (and most of that in easily-replaced, non-dimensionally-critical components) and is easily proportionally controlled.

Keep in mind that this is Classic Trains, where there is a 50-year cutoff on the technology we're 'supposed' to discuss.  It is interesting to look back on what STE designs even by the early '70s could feature, both in materials and operation... both 'pro' and 'con'.

But as a quick note: Sara, see if you can pull up the list of John Herbst papers in the repository of the University of Texas CEM.  The MegaGen developed for SDI applications is a suitable design for high-speed locomotives; it was the basis for both CEM's and my ALPS locomotives back in the day the United States actually still cared about true high-speed design... 

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Posted by Jones1945 on Saturday, April 3, 2021 4:23 AM

I found these photos of N&W TE-1's turbine from the NWHS Archives about a year ago and have been thinking of posting them here. Since you guys mentioned the potential damage to the turbine of the PRR S2 during operation,  I would like to share them here to see if these photos might help to enrich the content of the recent discussions even though they are not directly related to it:

"N&W TE1 2300 turbine and components after failure" (no further context provided)

 

More: https://www.nwhs.org/archivesdb/listdocs/select.php?index=search&Searchword=Turbine

 

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Posted by Sara T on Friday, April 2, 2021 3:30 PM

(deleted, forget it!)

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Posted by Sara T on Friday, April 2, 2021 3:15 PM

(deleted)

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Posted by Sara T on Friday, April 2, 2021 2:49 PM

(deleted)

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Posted by Overmod on Friday, April 2, 2021 9:39 AM

It occurs to me that Juniatha may know, or have thought about, the specific failure details of the Guy turbine in the LMS Turbomotive.  This was arranged with transverse axis, but as I recall had a relatively larger rotor diameter.  This was supposed to be a shaft fracture at relatively high speed under load, leading directly to catastrophic blade interference damage.  It is quite possible that analysis of the failed shaft would exhibit signs of cumulative shock damage communicated transversely through the bearings; on the other hand, I think there are forces that could be applied via the rotor to the shaft in bending that might induce stress raisers in ways less likely for the longer, thinner Rateau-stage Westinghouse design to develop.

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Posted by Overmod on Friday, April 2, 2021 9:26 AM

I would suggest that any issue related to turbines or gearing arrangements in warships is much more related to prospective shock from 'the other end' of naval rifles, and by extension torpedo hits as Juniatha indicated.  Possibly-complex interaction of shockwaves communicated from high-order detonation on what might be highly-stressed machinery would be the thing of concern there, and it is my understanding that even the largest naval rifles have been installed not to communicate supersonic shock directly to the ship's structure when fired.

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Posted by Flintlock76 on Friday, April 2, 2021 8:32 AM

Erik_Mag

 

 
Juniatha

2. - hard vertical shocks on a rotating turbine - and it doesn't matter what exactly was the amplitude or the impact, it was heavy in any ways - cannot be helpful for keeping it in running order. Don't try to let on Westinghouse had loads of experience in railway application of turbines: where were the respective engines? Never heard of.

 

 

Westinghouse built turbines for warships, which would be subjected to hard shocks, especially in the case of a battleship with large caliber naval rifles.

 

Apples and oranges man, those warship turbines were WELL protected down in the bowels of those ships.  The firing of the big guns wouldn't bother 'em at all. 

In fact, when many warships with turbine engines were scrapped the engines were typically in as good a condition as the day they were made.  

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Posted by Overmod on Friday, April 2, 2021 8:06 AM

Juniatha
1. - a heavy block unsprung - Westinghouse or other - on the two axles cannot be good for jointed rails 2. - hard vertical shocks on a rotating turbine - and it doesn't matter what exactly was the amplitude or the impact, it was heavy in any ways - cannot be helpful for keeping it in running order. Don't try to let on Westinghouse had tons of experience in railway application of turbines: where were the respective engines? Never heard of.

Neither issue is argued.  I find the Westinghouse design unfavorable and have repeatedly said so; the argument here is that they had their reasons to design it that way, knowing extensively the advantages of quill drive in locomotive 'transmissions'.  If they were wrong, it was not from ignorance.

It is a truism to observe that uncushioned running shocks are 'not helpful in keeping a turbine in running order'.  The specific issue here is whether either the prompt or cumulative damage from transverse shock to this (comparatively small) turbine is less than axial shock would be, and I believe this has been reasonably established in both the steam and gas-turbine industry.  Nothing beyond that is implied, certainly not that I personally think there would be little or no damage to any 'uncushioned' turbine over time.  Certainly in my own designs (which use far better bearing technology than was practically available in the '40s) I have been very careful to account for potential shock and impact.

 

 

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