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Union Pacific Tier 4? Scrubber on Exhaust 9900

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Posted by The Butler on Wednesday, August 22, 2012 2:49 PM

James


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Posted by YoHo1975 on Thursday, August 2, 2012 12:28 AM

So then, no actual verifiable source that the EGR unit has been removed an replaced then?

 

I apologize, I don't have any idea how well the poster that stated it is connected, but I couldn't find a picture of the unit with the part removed. Loconotes has been silent on it as far as I can tell. Was it in the Trains newswire?

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Posted by Lehigh Valley 2089 on Wednesday, August 1, 2012 9:22 AM

Is biodiesel any better? I know that trucking companies are using it, and I'm wondering if that could help hit Teir 4 standards, or if it's really more of an alternative to diesel, and not really better on the emissions.

The Lehigh Valley Railroad, the Route of the Black Diamond Express, John Wilkes and Maple Leaf.

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Posted by oltmannd on Wednesday, August 1, 2012 8:04 AM

episette

I found this link that explains some of the exhaust limits of tier 1 through tier 4.

 

http://www.dieselnet.com/standards/us/loco.php

Looks like the big hurdle from Tier 3 to 4 is NOx and particulates.  

NOx is a smog creator.  Smog is generally an urban problem and most RR diesel is burned outside of urban areas.  This seems to me to be a solution to a non-problem (a government specialty...)  Better they pursue incentives to shift traffic from road to rail through urban areas than do Tier 4 NOx.

Particulates are a problem for RR employees as well as residents of urban areas.  If you want to burn diesel, you are pretty much left with having to trap the particulates mechanically from the exhaust stream which is ugly business.  Switching fuel to nat'l gas or electrification would be the top alternatives.

-Don (Random stuff, mostly about trains - what else? http://blerfblog.blogspot.com/

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Posted by CSSHEGEWISCH on Wednesday, August 1, 2012 6:46 AM

efftenxrfe

Cleaning carbon from the internal bits of locomotives has a century  of history, used little labor, was very low tech. and I concede, a procedure that would greatly challenge an attempt to adapt it.

The process required opening the combustion air intake when the engine was working hard and holding a small shovel of sand in it.

Sanding the flues.....works for 844 an 3985. 

Sanding the flues was an action that was pretty much limited to oil-burners, cinders and fly ash performed the same function on coal-burners.

Environmental down side of sanding the flues, all of that unburned carbon went up the stack and into the atmosphere, where we all got to inhale it.

The daily commute is part of everyday life but I get two rides a day out of it. Paul
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Posted by GP40-2 on Tuesday, July 31, 2012 7:00 PM

episette

I'm an environmentalist but I'm also a mechanical engineer and I am wondering what the percentage of emission improvement tier-3 to tier-4 will be? I know that full implementation of tier 4 is still a few years away...

It may be closer to decades away if there is a big shakeup in D.C. this November...

 

episette

...but it appears that it would be more effective to modify older engines to tier 2 or even tier 3 levels than to implement tier 4 at this stage.

Tier 4 should definitely remain in R&D but at the current state of development it is too expensive, too inefficient and it would hobble fleets and probably double or triple the maintenance budgets.

Cleaning up the environment is needed, but there is also a limit of diminishing returns and it seems that tier -4 is pushing those technical limits. The amount of emission reduction might be too small to be economically viable. The railroad industry is already quite green and it shouldn't be hobbled with new and possibly unproven technology for only a small improvement.,

IMVHO.

 

What you say makes perfect environmental and economic sense. Get everything up to Tier 2 or 3, and you have a fleet of locomotives that produce minimal pollution,  are extremely reliable, and cost effective to maintain.

However, the current "powers that be" in Washington don't care about the economics, reliability, or technical limits of their mandates.

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Posted by efftenxrfe on Tuesday, July 31, 2012 6:36 PM

Cleaning carbon from the internal bits of locomotives has a century  of history, used little labor, was very low tech. and I concede, a procedure that would greatly challenge an attempt to adapt it.

The process required opening the combustion air intake when the engine was working hard and holding a small shovel of sand in it.

Sanding the flues.....works for 844 an 3985. 

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Posted by episette on Tuesday, July 31, 2012 5:13 PM

I found this link that explains some of the exhaust limits of tier 1 through tier 4.

 

http://www.dieselnet.com/standards/us/loco.php

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Posted by Lehigh Valley 2089 on Tuesday, July 31, 2012 4:48 PM

Episette,

I can certainly understand as to why the government wants the railroads to rebuild the engines so they have fewer emissions. But I agree with you that the government may be rushing it a little (mabye more than a little) with the results costing more than they are worth (it may be the same situation with PTC, but I won't get into that). I think that the government should handle emmision standards in baby steps, like with the proposed Teir 4 deadline be the deadline for Tier 2, for instance.

The Lehigh Valley Railroad, the Route of the Black Diamond Express, John Wilkes and Maple Leaf.

-Jake, modeling the Barclay, Towanda & Susquehanna.

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Posted by episette on Tuesday, July 31, 2012 4:06 PM

I'm an environmentalist but I'm also a mechanical engineer and I am wondering what the percentage of emission improvement tier-3 to tier-4 will be? I know that full implementation of tier 4 is still a few years away, but it appears that it would be more effective to modify older engines to tier 2 or even tier 3 levels than to implement tier 4 at this stage.

Tier 4 should definitely remain in R&D but at the current state of development it is too expensive, too inefficient and it would hobble fleets and probably double or triple the maintenance budgets.

Cleaning up the environment is needed, but there is also a limit of diminishing returns and it seems that tier -4 is pushing those technical limits. The amount of emission reduction might be too small to be economically viable. The railroad industry is already quite green and it shouldn't be hobbled with new and possibly unproven technology for only a small improvement.,

IMVHO.

 

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Posted by Andrew Falconer on Tuesday, July 31, 2012 12:03 AM

It sounds as though new scrubbers will have to be installed at a regular basis, because the old scrubbers will be out for a long time.

 

Andrew

Andrew

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Posted by Thomas 9011 on Monday, July 30, 2012 10:53 PM

CAZEPHYR

 

 Lehigh Valley 2089:

 

If I am remembering correctly, that locomotive has a Tier 3.5 rating. I do not know if that is with the scrubbers running or not, but it is very close to hitting Tier 4.

I also know that Cummins has just made an engine that has the potential to hit Tier 4, so I guess we will just have to see what happens.

 

 

You are probably correct that it is Tier 3.5.  I have read both numbers and do not know for sure what the scrubber version is rated.  It probably will be a maintenance nightmare since it will have to be cleaned to remove the carbon trapped in the exhaust scubber.

CZ

 

You're not kidding! Anyone who has tried to clean that built up carbon knows it is hard as rock. Hot tanking and steam cleaning doesn't do a thing. Solvent and acids don't do a thing. Even the wire wheel has little effect on it. About the only good solution is burning it off with a acetylene torch and even that takes hours. Better build those scrubbers out of stainless steel.

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Posted by GP40-2 on Monday, July 30, 2012 10:14 PM

I wonder who knew a year ago that EMD's taxpayer funded (wasted) "research" on EGR only 2 cycle Tier 4 wasn't going to fly...Oh yea, me. LOL. Whistling

Time for CAT to get that new 4 cycle locomotive engine they have been working on ready for production, complete with the Pig Pee tanks.

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Posted by YoHo1975 on Monday, July 30, 2012 3:09 PM

Is there a credible report on that happening somewhere? I haven't heard it and I've been watching.

 

Not that I'd be surprised, but I would think that if such a thing happened it would be bigger news on this board.

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Posted by CAZEPHYR on Thursday, July 26, 2012 8:16 PM

beaulieu

One of two Tier 4 testbeds for EMD the other is a UP SD70ACe with a similar hump. They are equipped with EGR, not an catalytic converter.

Interesting.  Do you know the road number of the SD70Ace that has the hump??

thanks

CZ

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Posted by beaulieu on Thursday, July 26, 2012 7:30 PM

One of two Tier 4 testbeds for EMD the other is a UP SD70ACe with a similar hump. They are equipped with EGR, not an catalytic converter.

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Posted by CAZEPHYR on Thursday, July 26, 2012 7:18 PM

Lehigh Valley 2089

If I am remembering correctly, that locomotive has a Tier 3.5 rating. I do not know if that is with the scrubbers running or not, but it is very close to hitting Tier 4.

I also know that Cummins has just made an engine that has the potential to hit Tier 4, so I guess we will just have to see what happens.

You are probably correct that it is Tier 3.5.  I have read both numbers and do not know for sure what the scrubber version is rated.  It probably will be a maintenance nightmare since it will have to be cleaned to remove the carbon trapped in the exhaust scubber.  

CZ 

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Posted by efftenxrfe on Thursday, July 26, 2012 6:37 PM

Ugliness to a higher level, but.....

the slant of the hood, cab roof and the uh, hmmm..... mega-wart are similar-----somebody tried or was it a clearance diagram limitation? 

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Posted by Lehigh Valley 2089 on Thursday, July 26, 2012 6:37 PM

If I am remembering correctly, that locomotive has a Tier 3.5 rating. I do not know if that is with the scrubbers running or not, but it is very close to hitting Tier 4.

I also know that Cummins has just made an engine that has the potential to hit Tier 4, so I guess we will just have to see what happens.

The Lehigh Valley Railroad, the Route of the Black Diamond Express, John Wilkes and Maple Leaf.

-Jake, modeling the Barclay, Towanda & Susquehanna.

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Union Pacific Tier 4? Scrubber on Exhaust 9900
Posted by CAZEPHYR on Thursday, July 26, 2012 6:03 PM

The 9900 is in Roseville today for some inspection or maintenance.  This is a SD59MX with the extra option or test option of an exhaust scrubber.

CZ

 

 

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