carnej1one submarine class I am very familiar with has three 90 degree V-18 engines arranged abreast.
He probably means the Kockup 'Collins' class. These are Hedamora (Swedish) engines, and if I am not mistaken there were at least two types of locomotives that had their engines installed.
I'd be interested to hear technical details of these engines (and the T45 locomotive). They may have had problems but nothing like the woes of the 338s!
carnej1 one submarine class I am very familiar with has three 90 degree V-18 engines arranged abreast.
He probably means the Kockums 'Collins' class. These are Hedemora (Swedish) engines, and if I am not mistaken there were at least two types of locomotives that had their engines installed.
Nope. 664 Cubic Inches per cylinder.
TIMZ: Then why wouldn't EMD have used the GE displacement metrics and really had a powerful engine?
noemdfan Nope. 664 Cubic Inches per cylinder.
carnej1 The U.S.Navy does not have any diesel submarines. The last one, Bonefish, had 3 Fairbanks engines
The U.S.Navy does not have any diesel submarines. The last one, Bonefish, had 3 Fairbanks engines
I think the more recent boats use CAT 3516 engines....
Certainly there is a shock qualified CAT 3516 available and we replaced the Detroit 16-149s in our FFG-7s with Cat 3516s. I'm told the crews like them and they reliably produce their rated power.
M636C
VGN Jess TIMZ: Then why wouldn't EMD have used the GE displacement metrics and really had a powerful engine?
Wizlish carnej1 one submarine class I am very familiar with has three 90 degree V-18 engines arranged abreast. He probably means the Kockup 'Collins' class. These are Hedamora (Swedish) engines, and if I am not mistaken there were at least two types of locomotives that had their engines installed. I'd be interested to hear technical details of these engines (and the T45 locomotive). They may have had problems but nothing like the woes of the 338s!
I admit I'm late to correct this out but I did not type the above comment, it was a quote from another poster included in one of my replies..
I would ask that people be careful when quoting to ensure that they are not inadvertently attaching my name to someone else's comment (I try to do likewise)..
Thanks.
"I Often Dream of Trains"-From the Album of the Same Name by Robyn Hitchcock
That's a great explanation; thank you. I will wonder no more. :)
M636C carnej1 wrote the following post 6 hours ago: Wizlish carnej1 one submarine class I am very familiar with has three 90 degree V-18 engines arranged abreast. He probably means the Kockup 'Collins' class. These are Hedamora (Swedish) engines, and if I am not mistaken there were at least two types of locomotives that had their engines installed. I'd be interested to hear technical details of these engines (and the T45 locomotive). They may have had problems but nothing like the woes of the 338s! I admit I'm late to correct this out but I did not type the above comment, it was a quote from another poster included in one of my replies.. I would ask that people be careful when quoting to ensure that they are not inadvertently attaching my name to someone else's comment (I try to do likewise).. Thanks. Indeed the original quote was mine... In a recent post I correctly quoted you but the original poster's name disappeared from the "boxed" quote through no action of mine. I assumed that in that case, it was still clear that you posted the "outer" quote referring to the unidentified "inner" quote. All of this has come about because the changes to the forum show the text as displayed when quoting. Previously and on other fora, control codes were displayed that made it easer to ensure that everything was correctly attributed. In my case on this machine running IE 8, I have to cut and paste the whole quotation because the "quote" button doesn't work. But I for one do try to keep the poster's name in quotes, not always with success. M636C
No problem.
Ironically I posted my complaint on the same day that I quoted a poster on another thread on this forum without doing my due dilligence; his original post was from two years ago and thus was outdated information but had been a valid observation when he first posted it..
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