-Don (Random stuff, mostly about trains - what else? http://blerfblog.blogspot.com/)
Scott - Dispatcher, Norfolk Southern
QUOTE: Originally posted by MP173 Gabe: Great to see you...hope things are going well with the family and work. ed
Go here for my rail shots! http://www.railpictures.net/showphotos.php?userid=9296
Building the CPR Kootenay division in N scale, blog here: http://kootenaymodelrailway.wordpress.com/
Carl
Railroader Emeritus (practiced railroading for 46 years--and in 2010 I finally got it right!)
CAACSCOCOM--I don't want to behave improperly, so I just won't behave at all. (SM)
Larry Resident Microferroequinologist (at least at my house) Everyone goes home; Safety begins with you My Opinion. Standard Disclaimers Apply. No Expiration Date Come ride the rails with me! There's one thing about humility - the moment you think you've got it, you've lost it...
QUOTE: Originally posted by Mark_W._Hemphill 1. Dieselization would have occurred much later. What made it happen when it happened is the immense wealth of GM that enabled it to invest immense sums into EMD and tolerate a delayed payback. Smaller companies simply could not do that. You can immediately rule out Alco, Baldwin, and Lima, as well as F-M -- they had no large cash reserves; in fact, the steam builders were hanging on by a thread after the devastion wreaked on their cash flow by the Depression. Caterpillar was a very small company in 1939! 2. The suggestion of Ford and Chrysler is not a bad one -- it was the metallurgical, machining, and manufacturing skills of the automotive industry that made possible the lightweight, medium-speed diesel engine perfected by EMD. I would rule out Ford because their management structure and outlook was backward and behind the times in the late 1930s. Chrysler probably wasn't large enough to fund such a program. 3. If I had to guess, I would guess that the market would have been entered slowly by Alco and the other steam builders after World War II, along with some small and ambitious companies building upwards from light switchers toward heavy switchers toward road engines. The key piece of technology was *always* the diesel engine, so these new builders would have tried to leverage off small diesel engines developed for other applications. It would have been interesting, but the history we already have is interesting. I am thankful there was an EMD for the sake of railroading.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Mark_W._Hemphill Larry, UP829: I suggest you're focusing far too much on reliability and standardization as the key criteria. The key criteria is the diesel engine itself.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MichaelSol It is true that EMD made claims for its products that other manufacturers had been unwilling to make, e.g.minimum economic service life of 20 years, cost per hp maintenance at 1/3 the cost of steam, etc. etc. The claims of course, were substantially exagerated. EMD products turned out to have an economic service life of less than 14 years, and cost per hp maintenance 50% higher than steam after eight years of operation. GM's claim to fame as a company was never in technology, but in marketing: Alfred Sloan's "model year" approach to sales. And, the model didn't necessarily have to be better, it simply had to be advertised as better. As Class I railroads began to dieselize in earnest, 1945-1950, they were earning a 4% rate of return. Railroads scrapped approximately $1 Billion in existing fixed assets associated wiith steam, and invested approxinmately $4 Billion for new facilities for diesel operation (aside from the locomotives themselves). Railroads incurred financing charges unprecedented in the history of the industry in order to achieve full dieselization. At the statistical end of the process, 1960, Class I railroads were earning 2.0 %. From a financial perspective, dieselization represented a net economic burden to American railroads compared to steam operation. Best regards, Michael Sol
"We have met the enemy and he is us." Pogo Possum "We have met the anemone... and he is Russ." Bucky Katt "Prediction is very difficult, especially if it's about the future." Niels Bohr, Nobel laureate in physics
QUOTE: Originally posted by jeaton Huh??? Your implication that the conversion to diesel was the cause of the decline of railroad return from 4% to 2% is a little farfetched. If you could find a "number cruncher" that would compare the actual financial results of a railroad, say the Illinois Central, with the result that probably would have occured had the same railroad stayed with steam power and show the latter to be superior, I'd buy the argument.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MichaelSol QUOTE: Originally posted by jeaton Huh??? Your implication that the conversion to diesel was the cause of the decline of railroad return from 4% to 2% is a little farfetched. If you could find a "number cruncher" that would compare the actual financial results of a railroad, say the Illinois Central, with the result that probably would have occured had the same railroad stayed with steam power and show the latter to be superior, I'd buy the argument. Better than that: a study that looked at three U.S. railroads in detail, including the ATSF, with a thorough financial review of their operating and maintenance costs, interviews with mechanical officers, and a detailed econometric analysis of 15 years of purchases and operations. Brown, H.F., "Economic Results of Diesel Electric Motive Power on the Railways of the United States of America," Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, 175:5 (1961). I don't recall now if this is in the paper, or Brown told me, but his Santa Fe experience was interesting. He was comparing the operating and maintenance costs from Santa Fe's own books, and said to the Chief Mechanical Officer, "you told me that the diesel-electrics are so much cheaper to operate, but your books show the exact opposite, that these locomotives are more expensive to maintain and operate than your comparable steam." The Mechanical Officer began to recite GM advertising claims, and Brown had to remind him "I'm sorry, but I'm a Professional Engineer, I don't care what the advertising says, your numbers show that either the advertising is wrong, or your numbers are wrong. If your numbers are wrong, you sit down here and show me how and where." The findings of Brown's study are consistent, not inconsistent, with the drop in earnings from 4% to 2%, during the specific time frame of a conversion to a motive power type that was supposed to be an economic benefit to railroads, and yet there is no evidence that it was, that is, to the contrary, the effort damaged American railroads financially in the decade of the 1950s, resulting in restricted track maintenance during the 1960s, resulting in the national rail crisis of the 1970s. An interesting exercise is to graph the net railway operating income as a % of assets, against the interest cost charges for locomotive acquisition during the period 1940-1980. The correlation resulting from a linear regression analysis is "suggestive". If not that, what does explain the drop in profitability from 4% to 2%, and why would the alternative explanation be less far-fetched than the massive recapitalization of the national locomotive fleet relying almost totally on financing which was not the case in the industry previously? Best regards, Michael Sol
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