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The diesel locomotive turns 100

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  • From: Louisiana
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Posted by Paul of Covington on Friday, September 27, 2013 8:10 PM

    I'm wondering how you would control direction on this beast.    I believe some marine diesels were (or are) direct drive, and direction is controlled by shifting the valve timing, but the text on this one says it was 2-stroke valveless.

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Posted by BaltACD on Saturday, September 28, 2013 6:39 AM

Paul of Covington

    I'm wondering how you would control direction on this beast.    I believe some marine diesels were (or are) direct drive, and direction is controlled by shifting the valve timing, but the text on this one says it was 2-stroke valveless.

I have a 2-stroke snowmobile engine (gas) that has 'reverse'.  When the reverse switch is activated, the engine is stopped and then fired in the reverse direction.  When the switch is used again, the engine will operate in the forward direction.

I have no idea of how it was done with this beast.

Never too old to have a happy childhood!

              

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Posted by Overmod on Sunday, September 29, 2013 4:55 AM

Unless I am more than usually mistaken, you're describing the Fell-system locomotive.  Here is a page with basic information on it.

And here is a bit more on the operation of the locomotive.

For those who just want to see a general diagram of the arrangement:

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Posted by Overmod on Sunday, September 29, 2013 5:18 AM

Paul of Covington

    I'm wondering how you would control direction on this beast.    I believe some marine diesels were (or are) direct drive, and direction is controlled by shifting the valve timing, but the text on this one says it was 2-stroke valveless.

The 4LV38 motor is described as 'direct reversing' which means that it would be fired and injection-timing-advanced for reverse rotation.  This would also affect the air injection for starting and slow speeds.  The McKeen cars reversed their gas engine rotation rather than interposing or providing a separate reverse gear arrangement in their mechanical transmission.

I can see no objective reason why this would be particularly difficult to implement on an engine of the 4LV38 design.

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Posted by narig01 on Tuesday, October 1, 2013 1:05 AM
Someone asked about the evolution of the diesel electric. The genesis of diesel electrical has much to do with the gas electric cars. Hermann Kemp had much to do with. Also Lemp I think did observe this locomotive. Or so it states in the wikipedia article.

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

I kind of wonder how big were the cylinders in this four cylinder machine.

Thx IGN

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