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Will UP ever restore its Gas-turbine locomotive?

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Posted by Overmod on Saturday, October 26, 2019 11:14 AM

Willie4
The other major part now missing is the main control cabinet. I might have the wiring diagram for this cabinet in my collection.

I for instance would be highly interested if you would scan this and put it 'on the Web' to post it here.  I do not know if any other version of that documentation survives in preservation, and it's important beyond just potential restoration planning.

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Posted by Willie4 on Friday, October 25, 2019 2:47 PM

I know I am way late to this thread... but I would like to add to the correct knowledge base about UP's #18 and its condition when donated to the Kansas City Railroad Museum some time before it was moved to IRM.

The A unit was basically complete mechanically with a few exceptions... There were only two traction motors remaining and these were on the front truck. The 850 hp diesel was in working condition. In fact, even after the donation was confirmed by Intercontental Engineering that company employed the 18 as the plant switch engine. Also, the locomotive did not have any batteries installed when donated. A welding machine was used to provide electrical power for starting and excitation of the generator.

The B unit is another story. There is a turbine inside the shell but it is missing a number of accessories. These include the "buckets" where the fuel was burned among other bits and piecces. Both the compressor turbine and the power turbine are intact. Other major parts that are no longer in the shell are the two generators although I believe that the power take-off gear box is still in place. The other major part now missing is the main control cabinet. I might have the wiring diagram for this cabinet in my collection.

I really enjoyed my years with the 18. While a big piece of equipment she was/is definitely huggable. I hope that the above helps the knowledge base. I have to add that I have no knowledge what IRM has done in the way of restoraton. Yes. 18 has received a new coat of paint. 

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Posted by wanswheel on Friday, February 16, 2018 12:25 PM
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Posted by erikem on Wednesday, December 27, 2017 2:24 PM

As long as the pressure is well above 673psia, there will be no abrupt change between liquid and gas. The flip side is as I mentioned earlier is that the density of the supercritical methane will vary with temperature, so precise metering will require good temperature control. I probably should see if I can run across a Mollier chart of Methane to see how it behaves as a supercritical fluid, e.g how compressible is supercitical methane below the critical temperature.

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Posted by tdmidget on Monday, December 25, 2017 2:54 PM

erikem

Critical point for methane is -116F at 673psia. That means that methane can be a liquid up to -116F given sufficient pressure. At pressures above 673psia, there will be no phase change as the methane heats up, but there will be an increase in volume. The variation with specific volume with temperature and pressure would make precise injector metering a bit of a challenge.

The -260F is for methane at standard atmospheric pressure.

 

True, but the problem remains. You would be taking the liquid methane at -116F to a cylinder head and approx 200F. You have a 300 degree difference  that will result in premature and likely dagmaging vaporization. The only reasons I can see for delivering the liquid to the cylinder are the maximum energy density of the charge and possibly lubrication of the injector. I think that they will have to accept a less tham maximum charge. Then they could get creative. The incoming air charge has to be (after) cooled. Maybe cool it by injecting LNG into it. Not sure that the proportions would match up but -260F will cool a fair amount of air. Of course this requires piping an explosive mixture about but that might be overcome mechanically though public image might be tougher.

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Posted by erikem on Thursday, December 21, 2017 11:03 PM

Critical point for methane is -116F at 673psia. That means that methane can be a liquid up to -116F given sufficient pressure. At pressures above 673psia, there will be no phase change as the methane heats up, but there will be an increase in volume. The variation with specific volume with temperature and pressure would make precise injector metering a bit of a challenge.

The -260F is for methane at standard atmospheric pressure.

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Posted by tdmidget on Wednesday, December 20, 2017 9:10 PM

"It is quite possible to preheat and 'mechanically' inject LNG into a combustion chamber;"

No. It must be kept below -260 degreesF to be a liquid. Explained by better than me here:. Nevermind apparently this childish website is afraid that someone might find another site more informative. See "LNG: fuel of the future?  in International Railway Journal.

"

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Posted by aegrotatio on Tuesday, December 19, 2017 11:28 PM

Pardon me if I'm talking out-of-school, but from what I know about liquified gas tank storage, be it LPG or LNG, the tanks are only ever filled to 80%.  The excess unused capacity of the tank is reserved for the boiled-off gas which is where the pipe is tapped to deliver the fuel to the engine.  Nobody's feeding liquified anything to an engine.  They're taking the gas from the (warmer) gas bubble at the top of the tank.

 

If the fuel is still too cold, it would be heated with glow plugs at startup and by the fuel line being plumbed near or through the engine exhaust while the engine is running, like in a "white gas" camp stove.

 

Unless I'm misreading your posts.

 

 

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Posted by Overmod on Tuesday, December 19, 2017 9:54 AM

tdmidget
LNG as a fuel? LNG is not a fuel, it is a means of dense storage and transport. No engine runs on LNG, it must be vaporized prior to injection.

And you're implying that we're to refer to, say, gasoline or Jet A as 'means of dense storage and transport' instead of simply calling them fuels because they, too, must be vaporized/carbureted prior to combustion?

It is quite possible to preheat and 'mechanically' inject LNG into a combustion chamber; you have to use special means to promote it, similar to what's required for CNG in a similar application.  It's a wholly different question whether that represents the most economical way to implement 'natural gas' dual fueling on compression-ignition locomotives -- it almost certainly is not, at least not on contemporary engine designs.

Much of the argument for 'turbines' in railroad equipment is not associated with pure fuel economy, just as arguments for steam power aren't.  In the '50s I think there was the assumption, carried over later into Kneiling's thinking, that innovations in metallurgy and fabrication driven by the 'aircraft industry' (read this largely as 'Cold War defense concerns') would produce reliable and relatively costed-down small, lightweight engines that would run long hours with minimal required maintenance, then be quickly swapped out on an 'exchange' basis (probably on sleds, like RDC engines) to keep equipment out on the road.  I think that dream was expiring as early as the practical HPIT designs and the late Cripe trains, and I think modern high-speed diesel technology has largely eliminated most niches for turbines with even the highest level of regeneration that can be packaged in a practical vehicle. 

I agree ... somewhat ... with the point on distribution architecture.  On the other hand, after the disasters that basement "gasolene" storage for electric generators caused in San Francisco and other places early in the century, precisely the same comments, with somewhat greater objective fact behind them, could have been made for eight-carbon hydrocarbon fuels.

Unfortunately (or, I spoze, fortunately if you're an Earth Firster or renewables addict) things like LPG and non-degassed Bakken crude have given transport of any dense form of natural gas a bad name ... one which I still consider justified for CNG, but that's another story ... which just doesn't apply to properly-transported cryomethane or LNG.  In a specifically railroad context, building out a distributed LNG fueling infrastructure once transport of LNG by rail becomes legal is neither particularly difficult nor particularly involved, although there are some detail-design concerns requiring care and, probably, some refinement with experience over time.  Much of the required liquefaction capability has already been developed for export gas, and is if not in actual construction (see the discussion on problems with the F125s in California) can be expected online by the time any serious use of LNG on a railroad larger or more complex than FEC were approved.

Having said that: it's been well-established in the utility industry that for any use where substantial operation below about 34% of peak shp is anticipated, positive-displacement engines are superior to turbines -- and that description describes how modern locomotives are almost always used.  Much as I'd like to find a niche for locomotives run like the Rio Turbio 2-10-2s were, steady at what corresponds to most effective cruise power in an aircraft application, there's really not enough such duty to justify construction of even a limited fleet of 'turbine-advantage' power, even if by that time a LNG supply architecture suitable to support them were in place.

And yes, even liquefied, natural gas has a low energy density compared to better carrier fuels, let alone 'fossil' sources.  And yes, there's a relatively large number of folks who would find common cause in ramping up the demonization of LNG dangers if and when that fuel came into widespread transportation by rail.

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Posted by Saturnalia on Monday, December 18, 2017 11:50 PM

tdmidget

 

 
Saturnalia

One other thing to consider would be that who would work on this unit? There just aren't many (if any) who worked on them back in the day to work on them now. Steam has benefited from the fact that there have always been "old heads" who knew how the stuff worked and could pass down the knowledge. The steamer's wisdom was never extinguished. Same with diesel many thousands of people know how the diesel-electrics from EMD, GE and even ALCO tick. 

Not so with the turbines. Which means even with skilled mechanical forces, they'd be going into it with a machine and some drawings. That's not much to go on. 

The 4014 team has the benefit of working on a very similar 844, they're used to big steam, and my feeling is that they see the 4014 as a scale-up from the 844 and Challenger. Not a ton new to learn. 

But Gas Turbines? Just too different. 

 

Who would work on it? Me, for one. Millwrights like me work on frame 5s all the time. They are still being built. Here is the one at the Training center in Las Vegas, donated by GE:

http://42mzqz26jebqf6rd034t5pef-wpengine.netdna-ssl.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/IMG_0228.jpg

 

No there is no need for A&Ps or black magic. We do it all the time. The aero derivative units however are not field serviceable and are serviced on a exchange  basis.

 

I stand corrected. I didn't understand how many of these sorts of turbines were still in operation. Thanks for your response - it was great reading! 

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Posted by erikem on Saturday, December 16, 2017 1:31 PM

tdmidget

I still question the frame 5 because my research indicates that all except the coal burner used the same engine. They were introduced in 1953, 4 years before the frame 5 was introduced. Possibly a development stage of the frame 5 but more likely based on the power generation engine first installed for OG&E in 1949.

I reviewed the drawings of the turbine locomotives in Thomas Lee's book Turbines Westward, the combustion chamber "barrel" was a bit over 5' diameter on the 4500HP turbines and close to 8' diameter for the 8500HP turbines. I don't know if they were on the same frame, but the 8500HP turbines have very substantial differences from the 4500HP turbines. Another significant difference is that the exhaust on the 4500HP turbines went though a 90 degee bend and a ~45 degree bend on the 8500HP turbines.

Where gas turbine locomotives may make sense is where LNG is substantially cheaper than diesel and air pollution regulations require drastic reductions in PM2.5. Having a battery on board may help in allowing for fewer start/stop cycles and letting the turbines run at close to full output when running.

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Posted by tdmidget on Saturday, December 16, 2017 12:57 PM

Saturnalia

One other thing to consider would be that who would work on this unit? There just aren't many (if any) who worked on them back in the day to work on them now. Steam has benefited from the fact that there have always been "old heads" who knew how the stuff worked and could pass down the knowledge. The steamer's wisdom was never extinguished. Same with diesel many thousands of people know how the diesel-electrics from EMD, GE and even ALCO tick. 

Not so with the turbines. Which means even with skilled mechanical forces, they'd be going into it with a machine and some drawings. That's not much to go on. 

The 4014 team has the benefit of working on a very similar 844, they're used to big steam, and my feeling is that they see the 4014 as a scale-up from the 844 and Challenger. Not a ton new to learn. 

But Gas Turbines? Just too different. 

 

Saturnalia

One other thing to consider would be that who would work on this unit? There just aren't many (if any) who worked on them back in the day to work on them now. Steam has benefited from the fact that there have always been "old heads" who knew how the stuff worked and could pass down the knowledge. The steamer's wisdom was never extinguished. Same with diesel many thousands of people know how the diesel-electrics from EMD, GE and even ALCO tick. 

Not so with the turbines. Which means even with skilled mechanical forces, they'd be going into it with a machine and some drawings. That's not much to go on. 

The 4014 team has the benefit of working on a very similar 844, they're used to big steam, and my feeling is that they see the 4014 as a scale-up from the 844 and Challenger. Not a ton new to learn. 

But Gas Turbines? Just too different. 

 

Who would work on it? Me, for one. Millwrights like me work on frame 5s all the time. They are still being built. Here is the one at the Training center in Las Vegas, donated by GE:

http://42mzqz26jebqf6rd034t5pef-wpengine.netdna-ssl.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/IMG_0228.jpg

 

No there is no need for A&Ps or black magic. We do it all the time. The aero derivative units however are not field serviceable and are serviced on a exchange  basis.

Jerry , how can you say that the frame 5 was "not suitable for moving platforms"? Yes, it's heavy as hell. BUT, it's not going into an airplane or truck. It does permit field serviceability, long life, and the weight would be there regardless as ballast. The only plus for aero based engines is rapid start. The frame 5 is claimed to have 10-15 minute start time but longer is better. Faster start times of the aero derivative engines will came at the expense of field serviceability. All moot when fuel consumption is 20% higher. LNG as a fuel? LNG is not a fuel, it is a means of dense storage and transport. No engine runs on LNG, it must be vaporized prior to injection.

Jim200 , nothing is "out of sync" in your link. That is a "wet start", caused by fuel input before the engine is up to speed for starting. The fuel accumulates in the hot gas path and ignites when the engine starts. Per Pentrex, the owner of the image, it is a start up.. This was VERY common with early aircraft engines.

In short, until the 20% fuel consumption penalty is overcome, it ain't gonna happen.

I have finally determined what engines were used. The second order , in 1958, did in deed use frame 5 engines. The first order , i suspected used a variation of the Belle Isle engine, The first commercial power generation by combustion turbine in the U.S. I was close. The Bell Isle engine is a National Mechanical engineering landmark. In the citation it states that GE had been working on a locomotive application for years and  when the opportunity arose they adapted it to utlity use. It was in service for 31 years and routinely developed considerably more than it's rated 3.5MW:

http://42mzqz26jebqf6rd034t5pef-wpengine.netdna-ssl.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/IMG_0228.jpg

This link won't copy and past but a search will get you there, all parts illustrated:

History of the Industrial gas turbine part 1: the first 50 years

 

So the locomotive engine preceded the Bell Isle, at least in developement.

The fuel consumption is the stumbling block. Even if natural gas was free there is no infrastructure to store it, dispense it, or transport it. The general public is scred to death of it, rightly or wrongly.

 

 

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Posted by Saturnalia on Saturday, December 16, 2017 1:26 AM

One other thing to consider would be that who would work on this unit? There just aren't many (if any) who worked on them back in the day to work on them now. Steam has benefited from the fact that there have always been "old heads" who knew how the stuff worked and could pass down the knowledge. The steamer's wisdom was never extinguished. Same with diesel many thousands of people know how the diesel-electrics from EMD, GE and even ALCO tick. 

Not so with the turbines. Which means even with skilled mechanical forces, they'd be going into it with a machine and some drawings. That's not much to go on. 

The 4014 team has the benefit of working on a very similar 844, they're used to big steam, and my feeling is that they see the 4014 as a scale-up from the 844 and Challenger. Not a ton new to learn. 

But Gas Turbines? Just too different. 

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Posted by tdmidget on Tuesday, December 12, 2017 8:13 PM

Overmod

Isn't this really two questions:  Will UP bring back its old style of GTEL, or will UP use turbine power in the future?  Note:  I am assuming you don't mean whether UP will restore a Big Blow to go with the Big Boy, or to doublehead with the Centennial, or whatever.  That question would need to be posted in the Steam and Preservation thread.

The answer to the former has really already been answered.  To add to what he said, the economics depended on a very cheap fuel, which ceased to be cheap in the late '50s.  If Jerry Pier sees this thread he can comment extensively on this and the other factors involved with these locomotives.

 

There is probably some application for turbine power on UP in future, but it would have to be very different from the historical GTELs (perhaps using a number of smaller ceramic turbines, and including substantial bottoming heat recovery making them in essence small GTCC plants).  Whether there are advantages to that, vs. modified positive-displacement piston engines making the same effective hp, remains to be seen; personally, I think the turbines may be a better solution for high horsepower if burning LNG or CNG.  But do not expect those locomotives to be Bigger Blows!

 

NO. There will not be any application of turbine engines in locomotives. It is a dumb idea. The fuel consumption of a GE LM500, the nearest thing appropriate in output, is 19.7 % higher than an ES44AC and that is at sea level with no parasitic loads. That is at full out put where the turbine is most efficient. at lower or varying loads the Diesel engine gets better and better.

No to any fantasyland fuels. Ethanol is only used in motor fuels due to politics, not economics. Methane has such a low BTU content that a tender would be required. Add to that the total lack of infrastructure and it is a dead loser.

I still question the frame 5 because my research indicates that all except the coal burner used the same engine. They were introduced in 1953, 4 years before the frame 5 was introduced. Possibly a development stage of the frame 5 but more likely based on the power generation engine first installed for OG&E in 1949.

 

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Posted by K. P. Harrier on Tuesday, December 12, 2017 4:02 PM

No one seems to have mentioned it in any detail, but when I was a kid in grade school one of my teachers said Union Pacific gas turbines were outlawed in Los Angeles because of the horrendous noise they made.  The law might still be on the books … If one was operably restored, southwest fans may never get to see it!

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- K.P.’s absolute “theorem” from early, early childhood that he has seen over and over and over again: Those that CAUSE a problem in the first place will act the most violently if questioned or exposed.

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Posted by erikem on Tuesday, December 12, 2017 2:26 PM

tdmidget

I don't think the prime movers in the turbine locomotives are frame 5s. The frame 5 wasn't introduced until 1957, and it produced over 16,000 hp in the first version.

The Big Blows date to ~1960 and the 8500HP rating was for 6,000 ft altitude and 80F if I recall correctly. With that in mind, the Big Blows may very well have used frame 5 turbines.

Indy Car:

The 1967 Indy turbine car used a PT-6.

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Posted by BOB FREITAS on Monday, December 11, 2017 7:54 PM

I wonder since GE built the GTEL's, would they have any interest in getting onboard with a project to restore one?  Turbine technology is light years ahead of what it was in the 1950's. GE could take one of their newest gas turbine industrial engines and apply it to one of the remaining UP GTEL's locomotives.  This could be funded as a research project, to see if the new generation of turbines, could fit in with modern railroading.  I'm sure the new engines, would be much more efficient, better fuel economy, less maintainence, less polution and noise. That combined with better traction motors and state of the art electronics, would make the repowered turbine locomotive head and shoulders above the 50's model.

On the subject of fuel, a turbine can run on just about anything that will burn.  CNG might be a good suggestion or perhaps straight ethenol ?  Its renewable  and not fossil based

From a historic standpoint, I think the turbine locomotives were just as significant, as the Big Boy and the DDA40X Centennial.  UP was known to build the biggest locomotives, no matter if it was steam diesel or turbine powered.. I have been track side when an 8500 HP Big Blow as roared by, with a heavy freight, and attacking a grade.  It was a fantastic sight to see...and hear

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Posted by tdmidget on Saturday, December 9, 2017 1:14 PM

I don't think the prime movers in the turbine locomotives are frame 5s. The frame 5 wasn't introduced until 1957, and it produced over 16,000 hp in the first version. It would be nice if someone could get a look at the unit at the Illinois Railroad Museum and get a pic of the name plate if it is still there, or pics of the engine itself if not, though it would be difficult to get decent shots inside the carbody.

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Posted by Overmod on Wednesday, December 6, 2017 9:50 AM

Do you have any idea of the SFC of that turbine even with FADEC control, operating on diesel/gas oil?  Were you thinking of keeping it on the turning gear with pulsed ignition fuel flow short of idle?  Electric assist to the compressor shaft?

Doubt you'd get a 5000shp PW150 in an Indy car - it weighs more than ¾ of a ton dry.  Of course it is more than usually attractive if you want a 'locomotive replacement' as it has a four-stage compressor, free turbine for propulsion, and output speed bang-on what a modern GE locomotive alternator expects to see (1030 vs 1050 rpm).  So a modular swap on a sled might not be too far-fetched... sure wish they'd kept one of the other units for 'experimentation'.

Now, what I'd like to see is that engine running on cryomethane for comparable output ... might even get some Energy Department grants to speed the plow...

 

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Posted by caldreamer on Wednesday, December 6, 2017 8:59 AM

I previously posted a question as to what it would take to convert a GTEL to diesel fuel.  The answer was replacment of the burn boxes, fuel pump and nosels, add computerized control system (which would control low speed/idle fuel use). Other than that it is ready to go.  An inexpensive conversion.  It could be done if UP really wanted to, which I doubt.

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Posted by dinwitty on Tuesday, December 5, 2017 9:29 PM
I ran into this thread while searching on the turbines, 14a and 16a were scrapped by IRM to raise funds, as noted in the above link, I think since that data may have been updated since that was posted.
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Posted by Jim200 on Monday, May 26, 2014 4:27 AM

UP #18 at the Illinois Railway Museum was said to be complete and functional. The A unit contained a Cooper-Bessemer 850 HP diesel engine which was connected to generators to provide power for starting the gas turbine, for charging the batteries, for air pressure, for dynamic braking. and everything required for movement (without turbine power) up to about 20 mph. The B unit contained a GE Frame 5 gas turbine of 8500/10700 HP connected via a rpm reduction gearbox to four generators which also serve as motors for turbine start up. IRM personnel state that it came without the gas turbine and inspection from the outside suggests that there is stuff inside, but no gas turbine.

This link shows what can happen when something gets out of sync.

http://wjhudson.files.wordpress.com/2013/04/turbine-ogden-ut.jpg

UP #26 at the Utah State Railroad Museum at Ogden Union Station is just a shell. All electrical components, the turbine, diesel engine, and even the traction motors were removed before it was donated. It would be cool to install a more modern gas turbine like a Pratt and Whitney PW150 5000HP,(a descendant of the 1967 Indy 500 race which it almost won), if the museum was amenable.

The following link states that UP #14A and UP #16A  were also donated to the Illinois Railway Museum, but the museum doesn't list them.

http://utahrails.net/up-diesel-roster/up-diesel-roster-01.php#gtel-1

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Posted by Paul Milenkovic on Monday, May 19, 2014 3:43 PM

oltmannd

ndbprr
It wouldn't be that expensive to dieselize one. Sort of a cosmetic resroration but I agree steam is something the general public sees as different. Another yellow blob won't excite them.

A yellow blob would never have a "lonely whistle"....

"But I shot a man in Reno . . . just to watch him die

When I hear that whistle blowin' . . . I hang my head and cry"

 

http://www.azlyrics.com/lyrics/johnnycash/folsomprisonblues.html

If GM "killed the electric car", what am I doing standing next to an EV-1, a half a block from the WSOR tracks?

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Posted by oltmannd on Monday, May 19, 2014 1:14 PM

ndbprr
It wouldn't be that expensive to dieselize one. Sort of a cosmetic resroration but I agree steam is something the general public sees as different. Another yellow blob won't excite them.

Something akin to the "lets make a GG1 move again" threads that have been around.  I agree with you that the general public sees things as "steam" and "not steam".   Just today I read an newspaper article where the NS steam train into Danville KY was described as having a "lonely whistle".  

A yellow blob would never have a "lonely whistle"....

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

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Posted by oltmannd on Monday, May 19, 2014 1:09 PM

erikem
What may make sense is a gas turbine battery hybrid, where the lighter weight of the gas turbine would allow for a much larger battery than possible with a diesel engine of equivalent power. Ideally the battery should be large enough to allow store at least 1 to 2 hours of the gas turbine's power to allow the turbine to run out at full power (most efficient) and reduce the number of starts (extends the life of the turbine).

Interesting idea!  How about two or three small gas turbines to better fit part throttle operation?

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

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Posted by daveklepper on Monday, May 19, 2014 12:59 PM

It would be more expensive to dieselize one than to buy a new diesel or they would have done it to the fleet and not scrapped the bunch.  But of course when the scrapped it they saved all parts that could be used to maintain diesels or build new ones.   Traction motores, trucks, blowers, probably even filters and the cab seats.

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Posted by ndbprr on Tuesday, May 13, 2014 7:47 PM
It wouldn't be that expensive to dieselize one. Sort of a cosmetic resroration but I agree steam is something the general public sees as different. Another yellow blob won't excite them.
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Posted by Jim200 on Sunday, May 11, 2014 10:32 PM

To get an idea of recent gas turbines, we can look at the M1 Abrams tank and the Honeywell AGT 1500 which powers it. This 1500 horsepower engine requires nearly 10 gallons of fuel to start and 10 gallons per hour at idle. Running cross-country consumes 60 gallons per hour, but normal operation is around 30 gallons per hour. The engine has been very reliable on about 9000 Abrams tanks and can consume a multitude of fuels including diesel, kerosene, gasoline, and jet fuel. Put three of these together on a locomotive would give you the equivalent horsepower of  the old UP gas turbines. However, the fuel consumption is still considered high and Honeywell and GE have teamed together to produce the LV100-5 as a direct replacement in the present Army's PROSE program. It is said to be quieter, lighter and smaller with 43% fewer parts. Fuel consumption is down to 5 gallons per hour at idle and down 33% at power, which should put cross-country consumption at about 40 gallons per hour. Reliability assessment will have to wait for actual operation in the field.

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Posted by Jerry Pier on Sunday, May 4, 2014 10:15 AM

The UP "Big Blows" used industrial gas turbines that were not particularly well suited to moving platforms.Gas turbines following areospace designs are better suited to portable use; easy start and stop, lighter weight, etc. Having said that, fuel cost is the problem that  has to be solved. Recuperation, a well established technique, goes a long way in solving this problem. (Turbomeca developed an 1800 hp recuperated unit before they got out of the locomotive power field in 2005.) Use of LNG as a fuel also has a good potential to reduce fuel cost as well as enissions. A new locomotive design would be lighter in weight, saving more fuel. The Big Blows had problems with lead locomotive exhaust starving trailer units for air. This could be overcome with high density power on the front end and better tunnel ventilation. The easy start configuration would make it possible to shut the power turbines down while going down a long slope, using auxilary power for dynamic brake exitation, thus saving more fuel.

Unfortunately all of this tends to be academic since there is little incentive for existing locomotive builders to abandon a fully amortised design. A government or industry incentive to reduce oil consumption (railroads use aroung 4 million gallons/year) as well as emission limitations could re-awake this sleeping giant but I'm not holding my breath.

I've written a dozen or so published papers on the subject, including a comprehensive history, none of which have made much of a dent.

JERRY PIER

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