I have seen pictures and even a video of E7s and E8s in the late 1960s hauling freight trains at high speed (60 to 70 mph). Looked impressive! SCL and Penn Central were well known for this. Apparently the passenger gear ratios allowed the higher speeds.Recently one of you posted that there were problems with E units hauling freight. What were they? It would seem that for hotshot, high speed freight the E units would fit the bill nicely. Of course during the late 1960s the SD40s and SD45s were being introduced and offered serious muscle.
Appreciate any info.Thanks!
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QUOTE: Originally posted by adrianspeeder Like Mark said, "If it starts, use it." Heck i remember a late pennsy pic of a RSD pullin a dead b unit (but with a boiler) on a passenger train. I dont remember the caption, but it was something like "last resort". I like the pics of the SF F45s and intermodals, and I bet an e unit would look pretty sweet pullin containers at speed too. Adrianspeeder
QUOTE: Originally posted by Overmod Hey Randy -- you would know Zardoz, you too. What were the weight-transfer characteristics of the swing-hanger Blombergs on E units -- did aspects of the design or the implementation allow equalization, frame tilt, etc. to unload the leading powered axles of the trucks on acceleration? Were any attempts (meaningful or not) made to alleviate this problem, for example on commuter units?
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QUOTE: Originally posted by zardoz QUOTE: Originally posted by Overmod Hey Randy -- you would know Zardoz, you too. What were the weight-transfer characteristics of the swing-hanger Blombergs on E units -- did aspects of the design or the implementation allow equalization, frame tilt, etc. to unload the leading powered axles of the trucks on acceleration? Were any attempts (meaningful or not) made to alleviate this problem, for example on commuter units? Overmod, - I appreciate your confidence in me, but you are getting into more technical aspects than i was educated in. However, having said that, there was a definite difference in the wheel slip tendencies bewtween the front and rear trucks. The front truck slipped far more than the rear, at least when going forward. I do not know if this was due to weight transfer upon acceleration, or due to the front wheels being exposed to slightly more debris and oil on the rail. Regarding the modifications suggested, even with fancy wheel-slip systems, and even if you put AC motors on them, you'd still have a locomotive that has fifty year old structural components, power contactors, wiring, etc. The CNW once had to retire a Suburban E unit because the frame cracked about mid-point. One positive thing about the E units: they had the best ride of any locomotive I was ever on, smooth and relatively quiet (for it's time) except for the exhaust of the 24RL brake valve. They even had real good cab heaters and window defrosters.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Randy Stahl The E unit was a terrible frieght engine ! As Zardoz stated before the wheel slip problem was enough to rule out these engines for the most part.
QUOTE: Originally posted by AntonioFP45 [Rob, thanks and good to know. I model in HO scale and since I have E units and am modeling the late 60s, I'd like to be able to justify them hauling freight occasionally. [;)] Do you have web addresses of the pictures of E units at the head of freight trains?
QUOTE: Originally posted by gabe I seem to remember about five years ago, UP ran its Es in freight service during a power shortage. Does anyone else remember this? I want to say there was a picture of this in Trains. After the education I received about Es under this post, I find it amazing that a first class operation like UP did that. That had to be the first time in forever that Es ran freight on a Class 1. Very interesting. Gabe
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