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Big Boys Recorded Horsepower.

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Big Boys Recorded Horsepower.
Posted by Conductor_Carl on Tuesday, March 26, 2024 6:06 PM

Was wondering if some clever people could set me straight on something.

I just got a copy of "Big Boy" by William W. Kratville. In this book there is a table documenting the testing of locomotive 4016 hauling a Dynamometer car (borrowed from the Santa Fe) and 70 additional cars weighing a total of 3883 tons. While the book does not have a trace of the dynamometer car readings, it does state the milepost, the speed, the actual drawbar pull, the grade, the curve at that milepost, and any acceleration. Coupled with excellent grade profiles of the Wyoming division, it paints a very detailed picture.

And then it does something that I just dont get. It adds a column for corrected drawbar pull (corrected to level tangent track) and then bases the horsepower off of that. This leads to the statement that at milepost 958, at a speed of 41.1 MPH on a uphill grade of .57 percent with no curve or acceleration, the Big Boy produced 6290 HP with a corrected drawbar pull of 57400 pounds derived from an actual pull of 51000 pounds.

So my question here is, why is the actual pull not what is used?

If my knowledge of Dyanamometer cars is correct, they do nothing to compute the curve or grade or any of those effects, they just measure the pull. Any impact of changes in grade or changes in curve basically have to be inferenced by comparing the grade profile with what Dynamometer trace shows. For example (because I have them on hand) dynamometer traces of the Allegheny on the Alleghany subdivision will show how the drawbar pull increases and the speed decreases as the engine leaves flat ground and starts to head up the .57% grade, when you plot horsepower from this it will start relatively low (as the train moves on the level) it will spike as the train starts to head upgrade increasing the pull but before the speed loss is really noted, and then it will return to another equilibrium as the train settles at its new speed and pull. At no point on these traces is the pull corrected for the grade.

The way that the pull is corrected for the Big Boy seems like they are stacking the deck. As a train goes from level track to a gradient the drawbar pull is going to increase due to gravity, but then it seems the 'compensated' pull calculates what the equivilant drawbar pull would be on flat ground. Basically, it seems that if the pull was 10,000 pounds on the level, and then it increased to 11,000 pounds as the train started uphill, the calc the UP (or William Kratford) did would then say that the train pulling 11,000 pounds up a hill is the same as 12,000 on flat ground and then calculate HP off of that. It looks like this calculation adds to the measured pull when it should probably do the opposite.

So am I missing something, or should the actual measured HP of the Big Boy be 51,000 pounds (the actual measured pull) at 41.1 MPH/375, for a total of 5,590 HP?

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Posted by timz on Tuesday, March 26, 2024 6:36 PM

What if they're testing it on a 5% upgrade? At 40 mph, its drawbar pull would be zero. Not too informative.

But if we know the engine and tender totalled 600 tons, then we know the engine was working hard enough to produce a drawbar pull of 60000 lb, on level track. That's informative.

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Posted by Overmod on Tuesday, March 26, 2024 9:55 PM

Rather than use 'horsepower', some railroads measured 'drawbar pull at speed' (which is easy to plot with a typical dynamometer or even an instrumented drawbar).  This is a different thing from 'indicated horsepower' or IHP, but it accurately describes how much 'revenue train' a locomotive will pull under given conditions.  (I presume you understand the Davis formula and its use...)

BUT

Horsepower measured at the drawbar when the train is working upgrade is only partially representative of cylinder output, because the weight of the engine and tender is also being 'moved upgrade'.  Obviously if the track were level, that much more weight could be pulled, and therefore could be 'added' in the Davis formula to get an 'equivalent' drawbar-pull correction.

One of the reasons 'brake locomotives' or dynamic-braking arrangements were used for some testing is that they can simulate increased trailing load, as if for the 'ruling' part of a grade, without having to backtranslate for the locomotive weight.

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Posted by Conductor_Carl on Wednesday, March 27, 2024 7:17 AM

sure enough, when I jammed in the big boys weight to the grade resistance calculation (595 tons times the grade times 20) the number it spat out ( 6780 pounds) was just 300 pounds over the difference between the measured and compensated pull. Add in the fact that the train had probably lost some water and coal at this point and I think that you are correct in that this is compensating for the engine weight on the grade.

Now I need to get my mitts on other railroads dynamometer reports and see if they do the same thing. What I am looking for is a like for like comparison, and I dont know if anyone else used this compensation factor for their drawbar HP.

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Posted by Overmod on Wednesday, March 27, 2024 7:50 AM

There are extensive PRR records, for the Q2 in particular, with charts of drawbar pull vs. speed that could easily be converted to dbhp.  (I have posted a scan of the 'comparison' graph generated for the V1 turbine in a number of past threads here; the original is a lovely thing in multiple colors at the Hagley Museum in Delaware -- this has a number of highly interesting locomotives and, for example, clearly shows where the Q2 booster was cut out after starting...)

Data taken on the PRR test plant are effectively 'on the level' so no grade compensation is observed.  When calculating train factor the service weight of the engine and tender, with fuel and water anticipated for the ruling part of a grade, would simply be added as a factor in the Davis formula.  I think Tim Zukas may know how many railroads did their horsepower calculations based only on drawbar pull at speed vs. calculating a dbhp number (which to me always smelled faintly of an effort to secure bragging rights for the biggest number, like the reported Lima celebration when the Allegheny surpassed the N&W's (itself a bit suspicious as never repeated) horsepower for the A.

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Posted by Conductor_Carl on Wednesday, March 27, 2024 11:34 AM

Overmod

Data taken on the PRR test plant are effectively 'on the level' so no grade compensation is observed.  When calculating train factor the service weight of the engine and tender, with fuel and water anticipated for the ruling part of a grade, would simply be added as a factor in the Davis formula.  I think Tim Zukas may know how many railroads did their horsepower calculations based only on drawbar pull at speed vs. calculating a dbhp number (which to me always smelled faintly of an effort to secure bragging rights for the biggest number, like the reported Lima celebration when the Allegheny surpassed the N&W's (itself a bit suspicious as never repeated) horsepower for the A.

Sure, test data can allow you to spike the ball, but confirming your calculated values and confirming that what you bought can do what you want it to do is important. 

Anyway, in the case of Big Boy I feel like the testing cuts both ways.  the testing showed that it actually underperformed the calculations at between 20 and 30 MPH but overperformed at all speeds above 30, which is good information for the railroad to have. On the other hand, putting the corrected drawbar horsepower seems more like a effort to secure bragging rights than just using the drawbar HP from the data you got due to how the corrected HP will be larger than the measured, and due to how the correction has to be calculated.

And if we want to crack open a different can of worms, I full stop don't believe the A's stated HP of 6300. due to how the only documentation is a article in railway age, that does not describe tonnage, does not describe grade, and isn't dated. Add to that that these tests don't seem to be availible on the N&WHS site and the fact that later drawbar/speed curves for the 300 PSI A's are lower, and I think those tests in 1936 were botched at a minimum and fabricated at a max. 

 

 

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Posted by timz on Wednesday, March 27, 2024 12:13 PM

Conductor_Carl
testing showed that it actually underperformed the calculations at between 20 and 30 MPH

What calculations?

You make it sound like they thought they could calculate the power the engine was supposed to produce. No doubt they knew better. They could try to predict its power, but there wasn't any "supposed to" involved.

Conductor_Carl
I full stop don't believe the A's stated HP of 6300
The 6300 dbhp is from the early Rwy Age article -- a later power-vs-speed graph just showed 5300. Anyway, I think you're overestimating the importance of "bragging rights". Some fans have guessed that's the only reason C&O got 2-6+6-6s instead of something sensible, but when C&O set the far-as-we-know dbhp record they didn't brag. No mention in the magazines, or even in the C&O employee magazine.

N&W's unlikeliest claim was that an A pulled 7500 tons at 64 mph on the level. (They originally said "comparatively level", but later the adverb fell thru the cracks.) For all we know the A did produce 6300 dbhp, but for all we know it didn't pull 7500 tons at 64 mph. N&W said it did, which tells us: when N&W says something, we need documentation, same as with anyone else. (Don't hope to get it, tho; documentation isn't something Americans do.)

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Posted by Conductor_Carl on Wednesday, March 27, 2024 3:54 PM

timz

What calculations?

You make it sound like they thought they could calculate the power the engine was supposed to produce. No doubt they knew better. They could try to predict its power, but there wasn't any "supposed to" involved.

you could make a calculated drawbar pull over speed curve relatively easy (and very easily now that we have spreadsheets that can do the gruntwork of calculating values in 1MPH increments) based on the characteristics of the engine. So they did just that, and the drawbar pull over speed curve that they have includes a dashed line for the calculated curve. That statement that it overperforms the calc over 30 MPH and underperforms the calc between 15 and 30 MPH is one of the conclusions of the test report (and yes, I did goof, its between 15 and 30, not 20 and 30 as I said in the quote).

And with regards to the N&W and documentation, they have heaps and heaps and heaps of documentation on all kinds of things... just not those tests from 1936.

 

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Posted by Overmod on Wednesday, March 27, 2024 6:00 PM

I have had to be very, very careful around Big Jim in particular regarding the "6300hp" for the earliest A -- you will notice not only was that by far the highest 'outlying' figure for any A, even the 'perfected' ones running the precision-scheduled heavy trains to Kenova, we never saw it duplicated for the record in the comparative testing against the F7s (where supposedly the EMD guys tried to cheat and N&W cranked up the safeties to 315psi, etc. etc. etc.)

Could you have refined a locomotive with the A's controlling dimensions to produce 6300hp?  Quite possibly.  But I really don't see it for the engines as built, and that is not meant as a slam at N&W or its people.

Hirsimaki documented the rejoicing (with, to me, clear overtones of gloating) when the Allegheny test data came back 'beating' the A's figure.  

Of course you also have to explain why PRR's test data came in even higher than the 'best' for the Allegheny, with two fewer drivers, no hinge, and truly ghastly nominal dead space in the tracts.  And the predicted 8000hp for the V1 using a virtually Q2-sized boiler's steam more efficiently was if anything conservative based on the numbers... 

You design the engine around IHP.  If you want to tinker around with some of the numbers, particularly the 'allowance' you make for AWP in service relative to MAWP as safetied, you may certainly do so, and you can then confirm the estimated figure with actual indicator data as you run around (level, upgrade, downgrade, or whatever) to determine that the steam is going through the cylinders as expected.

THEN you start testing to see whether the power is being expressed at the driver rims (if you have a fancy Prony-braked test plant) or at the drawbar (if you care about what matters to actually using a locomotive to try to make money in the railroad business).  And make no mistake, what matters is not what the horsepower 'number' or bragging rights about it might be, but how much you can effectively hang on the drawbar to work most effectively over the road to make revenue.

That is why, in the T1 testing, the 'machine friction' part of the efficiency is not emphasized more (as I recall it's nominally just under 10 percent, which I consider phenomenal for a reciprocating steam locomotive).  What you care about isn't what the indicator tells you you 'ought' to be getting -- what you care about is what the engine produces.  And from there, how you either improve what you've got, or how you operate it.

We might also mention, as a cautionary tale, Fry's book about locomotive boiler performance from 1922.  This was effectively 'unobtainium' to actually read until comparatively recently, but it was famous among other things for utilizing a lolog function for practical heat uptake from combustion gas traversing the tubes and flues.  Imagine my horror when, on finally getting to read it, most of his 'calculations' involve empirical factors scaled to 1922 practice, making none of his formulae particularly worthwhile in predicting performance from, say, the double Belpaire for Townsend's 4-8-6 project.

Incidentally, while I continue finding the original volume containing discussion of the initial PRR test plant at the St. Louis Fair circa 1904, here is something that Carl might care to read as representative of Test Plant analysis in 1924:

https://books.googleusercontent.com/books/content?req=AKW5QacoyG9VtpMSuTJHxUhbDqFdSZLTibqiPBlUuxx-WUS7G9Kaw7yJOBjjf68BsaQEo2ZtKBI2UZESW0EeGvDPoeKHVnji6srAQLQ0fAN58UQTZTdZmdZZO58ksj5x-Pv9Rz3oeijIwbKERLtNzwjn7dvgNV8nAz3-9fHCW9SiaAiZHuceP9DtQP4V2gcxzQ4TcxDC8RIlg9F71MTnX1_twKdb2Uyq00Ik-fdO8fl5870qYDOhwXJ1QH4DlLIYeswOqohHFmYYMuyEyanX-rCHoT7Ozg2j14SK3Xp9dTp14p4FLVxYcco

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Posted by Backshop on Wednesday, March 27, 2024 7:03 PM

Is there even enough surviving documentation to settle the whole "which steam locomotive was the most powerful?" debate?

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Posted by timz on Wednesday, March 27, 2024 7:25 PM

Depends what you mean by "settle". Assuming "powerful" refers to power and not tractive effort, then the 2-6+6-6 is the leading candidate, but there isn't enough documentation to nail anything down.

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Posted by Overmod on Wednesday, March 27, 2024 7:31 PM

If "power" refers to horsepower, and it would be more or less stupid to pretend to gin up another 'definition', the documented Q2 maximum horsepower (in the PRR records) beats the Lima maximum Allegheny horsepower (as reported by Hirsimaki et al.)

In any case (and this is also substantiated in the PRR motive-power records at the Hagley) the argument is relatively nugatory, because the water rate of a practical locomotive using any kind of modern water treatment for its boiler life becomes impossible to support above about 8000hp -- that was the specific factor that caused the V1 project to be shut down even while there was still a perceived 'wartime' need for it.

 

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Posted by timz on Wednesday, March 27, 2024 7:34 PM

Conductor_Carl
you could make a calculated drawbar pull over speed curve relatively easy ... based on the characteristics of the engine.

Making the curve is easy -- making it right is the hard part. Impossible, actually.

Have you by chance seen Farrington's book The Santa Fe's Big Three? It has DBHP curves for a 4-8-2 and a 4-8-4 that couldn't be calculated "based on the characteristics of the engine". Or based on anything else. Only way to get those curves was with a dynamometer car. (According to the curve, the 4-8-2 had 1200 dbhp at 65 mph.)

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Posted by Overmod on Wednesday, March 27, 2024 9:21 PM

Not to take away from what timz just said: what 'characteristics of the engine' were you thinking of using to prepare the initial performance-curve estimates?

IHP using something like the PLAN formula is, in my experience, often even more optimistic than Italian-car speedometers when you actually compare it to dynamometer data.  Add to that the lack of a proper method to calculate direct steam mass flow together with effective piston thrust in the 1940s (it is interestingly difficult even today) so you have to fall back on flowmeter data from the injector and feedwater heater -- and these can lag actual steam consumption in the engine(s) by a significant margin.

One of the interesting Q2 details on test was the observation at high cyclic of what they thought were actual inertial effects in the steam passing down the long admission pipes to the rear engine.  I would not have predicted you would observe this, but it was apparently severe enough on the test plant (!) to produce enough surge that there was expressed concern over the safety of continuing at that power level.  You are getting into undiscovered country for steam designers using old formulae to approximate things like 300psi steam with in dampered superheater elements at cutoff longer than 40%.

There have actually been criticisms of the PRR designers for furnishing "excessive dead space" in the ports and passages of both engines, the claim supposedly being that there was excessive expansion after exhaust cutoff leading to flow disruption on subsequent admission.  (While I have not seen a formal discussion of the port design, I suspect it was part of admission 'steam streamlining' to reduce perceived wiredrawing and similar effects at high cyclic/high mass flow.)

This is where the other 'they were fools' observation -- that the locomotive suffered excessive compression under the same extreme conditions -- comes in for discussion.  In the '40s there was something of a 'fad' to adopt Okadee blowoff valves to limit compression, but once you vented the excess 'pressure' you would find it falling below admission pressure by the time the long-lap long-travel piston valve made it back to open the admission steam edge for the return stroke... into that relatively large port and passage volume... and your steam would waste some heat energy expanding to fill the dead space, just as it would on older locomotives.  What you can do to solve this is to relieve the excess into an insulated reservoir connecting with the cylinder head, and then modulating the valve to allow the trapped steam back during the reverse of the valve so that the effective pressure from the port edge back into the cylinder volume was just falling past admission chest pressure on the 'other side' of the valve steam edge as it cracked open for admission.  As cyclic increases, the interval for admission gets shorter and shorter even as cutoff gets shorter per stroke, but if the port is effectively 'pressurized' up close to 300psi, even if saturated you get better thrust on the piston 'early' and can use some of what may be excess superheat in the actual admitted charge to give mixing for low wall and nucleate condensation during expansive working.

It is much easier to work with things like this empirically than try to 'calculate' them, particularly without nondeterministic math.  And you need actual road or plant testing, again with 'maximizing train-hauling effectiveness while minimizing cost' as the criterion, to have the empirically-derived results make sense to management...

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Posted by Conductor_Carl on Wednesday, March 27, 2024 9:47 PM

Overmod

Not to take away from what timz just said: what 'characteristics of the engine' were you thinking of using to prepare the initial performance-curve estimates?

I wasn't thinking of using any characteristics of the engine because I wasn't thinking of preparing any performance curve estimates. the UP says that they used Balwin calculations to prepare drawbar pull/speed and HP curves and then said how their testing conformed with that or didn't. I suspect that the baldwin calculations are the ones from 'The Steam Locomotive, It's Theory, Operation, and Economics' which was written by baldwins Chief Mechanical Engineer.

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Posted by Conductor_Carl on Wednesday, March 27, 2024 9:58 PM

Overmod

If "power" refers to horsepower, and it would be more or less stupid to pretend to gin up another 'definition', the documented Q2 maximum horsepower (in the PRR records) beats the Lima maximum Allegheny horsepower (as reported by Hirsimaki)

I thought that the Q2 Max HP of 7987 (right?) was IHP on the test stand, and the Alleghenys 7498 (right?) was measured at the drawbar over the road. IHP is taken at the cylinders so is going to be higher. I know that the book "The American Steam Locomotives: Design and development 1880-1960" by William Withuhn quotes the Q2 as having 6,645 drawbar HP, and conversely the C&O didn't ever get a IHP rating because they didn't have the facilites to do it. So comparing DBHP to DBHP the Allegheny has more... right? You seem versed in the deep lore of the Q2 and may know things that I've missed.

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Posted by timz on Wednesday, March 27, 2024 10:01 PM

No doubt Ralph Johnson (the Baldwin guy) knew what his simple formulas were worth.

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Posted by Conductor_Carl on Wednesday, March 27, 2024 10:01 PM

timz

Making the curve is easy -- making it right is the hard part. Impossible, actually.

 

Have you by chance seen Farrington's book The Santa Fe's Big Three? It has DBHP curves for a 4-8-2 and a 4-8-4 that couldn't be calculated "based on the characteristics of the engine". Or based on anything else. Only way to get those curves was with a dynamometer car. (According to the curve, the 4-8-2 had 1200 dbhp at 65 mph.)

 

 
Not saying that the calculated curve will be 100 percent acurate, which is why the UP did the testing. But looking at the curves overlaid, they were not far off.
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Posted by Conductor_Carl on Wednesday, March 27, 2024 10:15 PM

.

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Posted by Overmod on Wednesday, March 27, 2024 10:37 PM

timz
No doubt Ralph Johnson (the Baldwin guy) knew what his simple formulae were worth.

I thought it notable that the 1944 (latter) edition of the text contains not one word about either the duplex principle or any design details Baldwin might have used.

The picture surrounding Baldwin's development of the C&O M-1 turbine between 1945 and 1947 as seen from the PRR motive-power department is almost comedy gold.  Carleton Steins had a couple of patents on a design of steam-turbine electric, and Baldwin conducted what was said to be a highly secret development program designing and building those things.  In my opinion some of the egregious failures of detail-design vision may be attributable to over-reliance on Baldwin's then design philosophies...

As I recall, both the initial New Haven I-5s and at least the first of the ATSF 3460 class were delivered with defects that did not allow them to be put into service without repairs.  The I5s also had the same balancing fiasco as the infamous ACL R1s... and believe me, that was BAD.  (I never carefully examined the ensuing finger-pointing and blaming for what to me was manifestly a ridiculous 'formula' recommendation for overbalance allowance, and perhaps that is best for my atrial fib... the question being where was Johnson when the calculations were done for them?)

More shade on Baldwin (and their then-owner Westinghouse) can be had both explicitly and 'between the lines' from Louis Newton in the volume of his memoirs concerned with that later paragon of how not to do a STE, the N&W TE-1.

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Posted by Overmod on Wednesday, March 27, 2024 10:48 PM

We had copies of the various PRR records on the Q2 in the files section of the steam_tech Yahoo Group, which were lost when that service imploded so I can't confirm directly.  But I recall the horsepower reading being from the plant's data and not derived from indicator data.  It is highly possible that the observed horsepower could not have been put effectively 'to the rail' outside of the artificial world of the test plant; E.H. Harley, in his book on the Q2s, mentioned their relative susceptibility to high-speed slipping (usually starting with the forward engine even after sleeving) and the amount of surge reported for the test at high mass flow/high cyclic would have aggravated the causes of such slipping.  If we're going to factor in shoulda-woulda-coulda, proper proportional actuation of the antislip system (which was remarkably sensitive and quick-acting in other than valve actuation) might have improved the ability to use the 'available' cylinder horsepower rather than having to 'derate' in the absence of separate trim for the forward engine.

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Posted by BigJim on Thursday, March 28, 2024 8:52 AM

I'm trying to figure out how my name got drug into this conversation? 
SmileSmileSmile

.

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Posted by Conductor_Carl on Thursday, March 28, 2024 10:27 AM

It wasn't me!

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Posted by Overmod on Thursday, March 28, 2024 10:39 AM

BigJim
I'm trying to figure out how my name got drug into this conversation?

Any attempt to even hint at the idea that the A prototype didn't produce "6300 horsepower" on initial testing often meets with... vocal disfavor... from the more faithful N&W zealots.  I was attempting to defuse any possible concern over that issue from its likeliest Forum source...  Smile

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Posted by timz on Thursday, March 28, 2024 12:54 PM

Conductor_Carl
I thought that the Q2 Max HP of 7987 (right?) was IHP on the test stand, and the Alleghenys 7498 (right?) was measured at the drawbar over the road.

All true -- only problem is, was the 7498 just a momentary blip. We don't know whether it could maintain even 7000 dbhp for five minutes, or ten, or twenty. (That's the usual situation, in the US.)
Conductor_Carl
William Withuhn quotes the Q2 as having 6,645 drawbar HP
Meaning, on the test plant?

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Posted by Conductor_Carl on Thursday, March 28, 2024 2:14 PM

timz

All true -- only problem is, was the 7498 just a momentary blip. We don't know whether it could maintain even 7000 dbhp for five minutes, or ten, or twenty. (That's the usual situation, in the US.)

So, the 7498 is a momentary reading. Allegedly the Allegheny recorded a maximum sustained drawbar HP of 7375, but I have not seen the plot for this. The plot I have looked at has the Allegheny sustaining between 5000 and 6000 HP as it hauls coal up the .57 percent grade at Alleghany at between 15 and 20 MPH. I believe that this is not compensated for grade or curve, so if it went by the Big Boys way of doing things it would be greater. I am due to get a copy of the test reports soon to clear up some of those questions.

timz

Meaning, on the test plant?

Yeah, he doesn't say. Maybe it is over the road, maybe its on the stand (in which case it would have to subtract out the tender because they could not fit it into the building if i remember right)

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Posted by Overmod on Thursday, March 28, 2024 3:14 PM

Keep in mind that the 'peak of the horsepower curve' for the Allegheny design is considerably above "15 to 20mph" -- I seem to remember it being corresponding to road speed somewhere in the low 40s.  So you would want to see 'smoothed' average of drawbar pull (over a sustained distance either side of a given reference mile location) and derive horsepower from pull and distance.  Then correct the figure for the weight of engine and tender as already discussed.

That the Allegheny chassis ought to be able to produce higher horsepower than the Q2 chassis seems almost self-evident -- but it in part would presume that the boiler pressure and the exhaust drafting and back-pressure arrangements were comparable to the Q2's as well.  The lack of 300psi pressure only means that the Allegheny would have to trade some mass flow for pressure; I would not expect either of its engines to be valve-limited at 'best speed', the radiant and convective sections of the boiler ought to be able to source this flow, and perhaps most importantly the commodious pipe arrangements that contributed so much toward the 'overweight' problem would not constitute a restriction all the way from the throttle through to the nozzle and front-end arrangement.

Locomotives on the PRR Test Plant did not operate with their tenders attached; this was a probable contributing factor to the perceived surge when the two engines on the Q2 'came into sync' during the testing.  If you read the patent discussion for the Westinghouse Langer balancer, although some of it is 'between the lines', you can see the relative importance on the surge component of overbalance that a large, heavy tender helps to damp out.

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Posted by timz on Thursday, March 28, 2024 4:10 PM

Conductor_Carl
The plot I have looked at has the Allegheny sustaining between 5000 and 6000 HP as it hauls coal up the .57 percent grade at Alleghany at between 15 and 20 MPH.

6000 (drawbar?) horsepower at 20 mph is 112500 lb. It was doing that?

By the way: if we use the usual formula for curve resistance (0.04% per degree) the climb to Alleghany averages about 0.64% compensated for ... ten miles as I recall.

PRR never ran a Q2 with a dynamometer car, did they?

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Posted by Overmod on Thursday, March 28, 2024 5:22 PM

timz
PRR never ran a Q2 with a dynamometer car, did they?

I thought they relied on their plant.  But didn't C&O test one at some point around when they tested the T1?  

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Posted by Conductor_Carl on Thursday, March 28, 2024 5:25 PM

Eh, a bit less if im totally honest.

Between milemarker 311 and 309 the engine is running more or less at a steady pace of 22 MPH on the .57% grade with the pull gradually increasing untill it peaks at milemarker 309 at 97,000 pounds, for 5690 DBHP. Seeing how it was increasing its HP up to this point it seems sustainable. After that the train begins to slow for the approch into Alleghany summit. This is taken from test run 12 on July 14 of 1943. There is a peak of over 7000 on this test but that is when the train leaves the level grade and starts up the hill going 40 and its clearly unsustainable. As a aside, compensated for grade (no curvature of note at milemarker 309) this is a bit under 6100 HP.

No idea if the Q2 ever hooked up to a dyanmometer car but I don't know how else they would have gotted a drawbar pull otherwise. Unless I am missing information on how the test plant works.

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