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Diesel locomotive

A diesel locomotive is a type of railway locomotive in which the prime mover is a diesel engine. Several types of diesel locomotives have been developed, differing mainly in the means by which mechanical power is conveyed to the driving wheels.

The ČKD ČME3 is one of the longest-running and most-manufactured diesel–electric locomotives ever made.
The InterCity 125, the current confirmed record holder as the fastest diesel-powered train at 148 mph (238 km/h); is made up of two power cars, one at each end of a fixed formation of carriages; capable of 125 mph (201 km/h) in regular service.
These Pacific National-operated locos show three styles of diesel locomotive body: box cab (rear), hood unit (center) and cab unit (front).

Early internal combustion locomotives and railcars used kerosene and gasoline as their fuel. Rudolf Diesel patented his first compression-ignition engine[1] in 1898, and steady improvements to the design of diesel engines reduced their physical size and improved their power-to-weight ratios to a point where one could be mounted in a locomotive. Internal combustion engines only operate efficiently within a limited power band, and while low power gasoline engines could be coupled to mechanical transmissions, the more powerful diesel engines required the development of new forms of transmission.[2][3][4][5][6] This is because clutches would need to be very large at these power levels and would not fit in a standard 2.5 m (8 ft 2 in)-wide locomotive frame, or wear too quickly to be useful.

The first successful diesel engines used diesel–electric transmissions, and by 1925 a small number of diesel locomotives of 600 hp (450 kW) were in service in the United States. In 1930, Armstrong Whitworth of the United Kingdom delivered two 1,200 hp (890 kW) locomotives using Sulzer-designed engines to Buenos Aires Great Southern Railway of Argentina. In 1933, diesel–electric technology developed by Maybach was used to propel the DRG Class SVT 877, a high-speed intercity two-car set, and went into series production with other streamlined car sets in Germany starting in 1935. In the United States, diesel–electric propulsion was brought to high-speed mainline passenger service in late 1934, largely through the research and development efforts of General Motors dating back to the late 1920s and advances in lightweight car body design by the Budd Company.

The economic recovery from World War II caused the widespread adoption of diesel locomotives in many countries. They offered greater flexibility and performance than steam locomotives, as well as substantially lower operating and maintenance costs.[7]

History

Adaptation for rail use

 
Diagram of Priestman oil engine from The Steam engine and gas and oil engines (1900) by John Perry
 
Petrol–electric Weitzer railmotor, first 1903, series 1906

The earliest recorded example of the use of an internal combustion engine in a railway locomotive is the prototype designed by William Dent Priestman, which was examined by William Thomson, 1st Baron Kelvin in 1888 who described it as a "[Priestman oil engine] mounted upon a truck which is worked on a temporary line of rails to show the adaptation of a petroleum engine for locomotive purposes."[8][9] In 1894, a 20 hp (15 kW) two-axle machine built by Priestman Brothers was used on the Hull Docks.[10][11] In 1896, an oil-engined railway locomotive was built for the Royal Arsenal in Woolwich, England, using an engine designed by Herbert Akroyd Stuart.[12] It was not a diesel, because it used a hot bulb engine (also known as a semi-diesel), but it was the precursor of the diesel.

Rudolf Diesel considered using his engine for powering locomotives in his 1893 book Theorie und Konstruktion eines rationellen Wärmemotors zum Ersatz der Dampfmaschine und der heute bekannten Verbrennungsmotoren (Theory and Construction of a Rational Heat Motor).[13] However, the massiveness and poor power-to-weight ratio of early diesel engines made them unsuitable for propelling land-based vehicles. Therefore, the engine's potential as a railroad prime mover was not initially recognized.[14] This changed as development reduced the size and weight of the engine.

In 1906, Rudolf Diesel, Adolf Klose and the steam and diesel engine manufacturer Gebrüder Sulzer founded Diesel-Sulzer-Klose GmbH to manufacture diesel-powered locomotives. Sulzer had been manufacturing diesel engines since 1898. The Prussian State Railways ordered a diesel locomotive from the company in 1909, and after test runs between Winterthur and Romanshorn, Switzerland, the diesel–mechanical locomotive was delivered in Berlin in September 1912. The world's first diesel-powered locomotive was operated in the summer of 1912 on the same line from Winterthur, but was not a commercial success.[15] During test runs in 1913 several problems were found. The outbreak of World War I in 1914 prevented all further trials. The locomotive weight was 95 tonnes and the power was 883 kW (1,184 hp) with a maximum speed of 100 km/h (62 mph).[16]

Small numbers of prototype diesel locomotives were produced in a number of countries through the mid-1920s.

Early diesel locomotives and railcars in the United States

Early North American developments

Adolphus Busch purchased the American manufacturing rights for the diesel engine in 1898 but never applied this new form of power to transportation. He founded the Busch-Sulzer company in 1911. Only limited success was achieved in the early twentieth century with internal combustion engined railcars, due, in part, to difficulties with mechanical drive systems.[17]

General Electric (GE) entered the railcar market in the early twentieth century, as Thomas Edison possessed a patent on the electric locomotive, his design actually being a type of electrically propelled railcar.[18] GE built its first electric locomotive prototype in 1895. However, high electrification costs caused GE to turn its attention to internal combustion power to provide electricity for electric railcars. Problems related to co-ordinating the prime mover and electric motor were immediately encountered, primarily due to limitations of the Ward Leonard current control system that had been chosen.[citation needed] GE Rail was formed in 1907 and 112 years later, in 2019, was purchased by and merged with Wabtec.

A significant breakthrough occurred in 1914, when Hermann Lemp, a GE electrical engineer, developed and patented a reliable control system that controlled the engine and traction motor with a single lever; subsequent improvements were also patented by Lemp.[19] Lemp's design solved the problem of overloading and damaging the traction motors with excessive electrical power at low speeds, and was the prototype for all internal combustion–electric drive control systems.

In 1917–1918, GE produced three experimental diesel–electric locomotives using Lemp's control design, the first known to be built in the United States.[20] Following this development, the 1923 Kaufman Act banned steam locomotives from New York City, because of severe pollution problems. The response to this law was to electrify high-traffic rail lines. However, electrification was uneconomical to apply to lower-traffic areas.

The first regular use of diesel–electric locomotives was in switching (shunter) applications, which were more forgiving than mainline applications of the limitations of contemporary diesel technology and where the idling economy of diesel relative to steam would be most beneficial. GE entered a collaboration with the American Locomotive Company (ALCO) and Ingersoll-Rand (the "AGEIR" consortium) in 1924 to produce a prototype 300 hp (220 kW) "boxcab" locomotive delivered in July 1925. This locomotive demonstrated that the diesel–electric power unit could provide many of the benefits of an electric locomotive without the railroad having to bear the sizeable expense of electrification.[21] The unit successfully demonstrated, in switching and local freight and passenger service, on ten railroads and three industrial lines.[22] Westinghouse Electric and Baldwin collaborated to build switching locomotives starting in 1929. However, the Great Depression curtailed demand for Westinghouse's electrical equipment, and they stopped building locomotives internally, opting to supply electrical parts instead.[23]

In June 1925, Baldwin Locomotive Works outshopped a prototype diesel–electric locomotive for "special uses" (such as for runs where water for steam locomotives was scarce) using electrical equipment from Westinghouse Electric Company.[24] Its twin-engine design was not successful, and the unit was scrapped after a short testing and demonstration period.[25] Industry sources were beginning to suggest "the outstanding advantages of this new form of motive power".[26] In 1929, the Canadian National Railways became the first North American railway to use diesels in mainline service with two units, 9000 and 9001, from Westinghouse.[27] However, these early diesels proved expensive and unreliable, with their high cost of acquisition relative to steam unable to be realized in operating cost savings as they were frequently out of service. It would be another five years before diesel–electric propulsion would be successfully used in mainline service, and nearly ten years before fully replacing steam became a real prospect with existing diesel technology.

Before diesel power could make inroads into mainline service, the limitations of diesel engines circa 1930 – low power-to-weight ratios and narrow output range – had to be overcome. A major effort to overcome those limitations was launched by General Motors after they moved into the diesel field with their acquisition of the Winton Engine Company, a major manufacturer of diesel engines for marine and stationary applications, in 1930. Supported by the General Motors Research Division, GM's Winton Engine Corporation sought to develop diesel engines suitable for high-speed mobile use. The first milestone in that effort was delivery in early 1934 of the Winton 201A, a two-stroke, mechanically-aspirated, uniflow-scavenged, unit-injected diesel engine that could deliver the required performance for a fast, lightweight passenger train. The second milestone, and the one that got American railroads moving towards diesel, was the 1938 delivery of GM's Model 567 engine that was designed specifically for locomotive use, bringing a fivefold increase in life of some mechanical parts and showing its potential for meeting the rigors of freight service.[28]

Diesel–electric railroad locomotion entered mainline service when the Burlington Railroad and Union Pacific used custom-built diesel "streamliners" to haul passengers, starting in late 1934.[17][29] Burlington's Zephyr trainsets evolved from articulated three-car sets with 600 hp power cars in 1934 and early 1935, to the Denver Zephyr semi-articulated ten car trainsets pulled by cab-booster power sets introduced in late 1936. Union Pacific started diesel streamliner service between Chicago and Portland Oregon in June 1935, and in the following year would add Los Angeles, CA, Oakland, CA, and Denver, CO to the destinations of diesel streamliners out of Chicago. The Burlington and Union Pacific streamliners were built by the Budd Company and the Pullman-Standard Company, respectively, using the new Winton engines and power train systems designed by GM's Electro-Motive Corporation. EMC's experimental 1800 hp B-B locomotives of 1935 demonstrated the multiple-unit control systems used for the cab/booster sets and the twin-engine format used with the later Zephyr power units. Both of those features would be used in EMC's later production model locomotives. The lightweight diesel streamliners of the mid-1930s demonstrated the advantages of diesel for passenger service with breakthrough schedule times, but diesel locomotive power would not fully come of age until regular series production of mainline diesel locomotives commenced and it was shown suitable for full-size passenger and freight service.

First American series production locomotives

Following their 1925 prototype, the AGEIR consortium produced 25 more units of 300 hp (220 kW) "60 ton" AGEIR boxcab switching locomotives between 1925 and 1928 for several New York City railroads, making them the first series-produced diesel locomotives.[30] The consortium also produced seven twin-engine "100 ton" boxcabs and one hybrid trolley/battery unit with a diesel-driven charging circuit. ALCO acquired the McIntosh & Seymour Engine Company in 1929 and entered series production of 300 hp (220 kW) and 600 hp (450 kW) single-cab switcher units in 1931. ALCO would be the pre-eminent builder of switch engines through the mid-1930s and would adapt the basic switcher design to produce versatile and highly successful, albeit relatively low powered, road locomotives.

GM, seeing the success of the custom streamliners, sought to expand the market for diesel power by producing standardized locomotives under their Electro-Motive Corporation. In 1936, EMC's new factory started production of switch engines. In 1937, the factory started producing their new E series streamlined passenger locomotives, which would be upgraded with more reliable purpose-built engines in 1938. Seeing the performance and reliability of the new 567 model engine in passenger locomotives, EMC was eager to demonstrate diesel's viability in freight service.

Following the successful 1939 tour of EMC's FT demonstrator freight locomotive set, the stage was set for dieselization of American railroads. In 1941, ALCO-GE introduced the RS-1 road-switcher that occupied its own market niche while EMD's F series locomotives were sought for mainline freight service. The US entry into World War II slowed conversion to diesel; the War Production Board put a halt to building new passenger equipment and gave naval uses priority for diesel engine production. During the petroleum crisis of 1942–43, coal-fired steam had the advantage of not using fuel that was in critically short supply. EMD was later allowed to increase the production of its FT locomotives and ALCO-GE was allowed to produce a limited number of DL-109 road locomotives, but most in the locomotive business were restricted to making switch engines and steam locomotives.

In the early postwar era, EMD dominated the market for mainline locomotives with their E and F series locomotives. ALCO-GE in the late 1940s produced switchers and road-switchers that were successful in the short-haul market. However, EMD launched their GP series road-switcher locomotives in 1949, which displaced all other locomotives in the freight market including their own F series locomotives. GE subsequently dissolved its partnership with ALCO and would emerge as EMD's main competitor in the early 1960s, eventually taking the top position in the locomotive market from EMD.

Early diesel–electric locomotives in the United States used direct current (DC) traction motors, but alternating current (AC) motors came into widespread use in the 1990s, starting with the Electro-Motive SD70MAC in 1993 and followed by General Electric's AC4400CW in 1994 and AC6000CW in 1995.[31]

Early diesel locomotives and railcars in Europe

First functional diesel vehicles

 
Swiss and German co-production: world's first functional diesel–electric railcar 1914

In 1914, the world's first functional diesel–electric railcars were produced for the Königlich-Sächsische Staatseisenbahnen (Royal Saxon State Railways) by Waggonfabrik Rastatt with electric equipment from Brown, Boveri & Cie and diesel engines from Swiss Sulzer AG. They were classified as DET 1 and DET 2 (de.wiki [de]). Because of a shortage of petrol products during World War I, they remained unused for regular service in Germany. In 1922, they were sold to Swiss Compagnie du Chemin de fer Régional du Val-de-Travers (fr.wiki [fr]), where they were used in regular service up to the electrification of the line in 1944. Afterwards, the company kept them in service as boosters until 1965.

Fiat claims to have built the first Italian diesel–electric locomotive in 1922, but little detail is available. Several Fiat-TIBB Bo'Bo' diesel–locomotives were built for service on the 950 mm (3 ft 1+38 in) narrow gauge Ferrovie Calabro Lucane and the Società per le Strade Ferrate del Mediterrano in southern Italy in 1926, following trials in 1924–25.[32] The six-cylinder two-stroke motor produced 440 horsepower (330 kW) at 500 rpm, driving four DC motors, one for each axle. These 44 tonnes (43 long tons; 49 short tons) locomotives with 45 km/h (28 mph) top speed proved quite successful.[33]

In 1924, two diesel–electric locomotives were taken in service by the Soviet railways, almost at the same time:

 
World's first useful diesel locomotive for long distances SŽD Eel2
  • The engine Ээл2 (Eel2 original number Юэ 001/Yu-e 001) started on October 22. It had been designed by a team led by Yuri Lomonosov and built 1923–1924 by Maschinenfabrik Esslingen in Germany. It had five driving axles (1'E1'). After several test rides, it hauled trains for almost three decades from 1925 to 1954.[34] Though proved to be world's first functional diesel locomotive, it did not become a series, but it became a model for several classes of Soviet diesel locomotives.
  • The engine Щэл1 (Shch-el 1, original number Юэ2/Yu-e 2), started on November 9. It had been developed by Yakov Modestovich Gakkel (ru.wiki [ru]) and built by Baltic Shipyard in Saint Petersburg. It had ten driving axles in three bogies (1' Co' Do' Co' 1'). From 1925 to 1927, it hauled trains between Moscow and Kursk and in Caucasus region. Due to technical problems, afterwards, it was out of service. Since 1934, it was used as a stationary electric generator.

In 1935, Krauss-Maffei, MAN and Voith built the first diesel–hydraulic locomotive, called V 140, in Germany. Diesel–hydraulics became the mainstream in diesel locomotives in Germany since the German railways (DRG) were pleased with the performance of that engine. Serial production of diesel locomotives in Germany began after World War II.

Switchers

 
Shunter of Nederlandse Spoorwegen from 1934, in modern livery

In many railway stations and industrial compounds, steam shunters had to be kept hot during many breaks between scattered short tasks. Therefore, diesel traction became economical for shunting before it became economical for hauling trains. The construction of diesel shunters began in 1920 in France, in 1925 in Denmark, in 1926 in the Netherlands, and in 1927 in Germany. After a few years of testing, hundreds of units were produced within a decade.

Diesel railcars for regional traffic

 
Renault VH, France, 1933/34

Diesel-powered or "oil-engined" railcars, generally diesel–mechanical, were developed by various European manufacturers in the 1930s, e.g. by William Beardmore and Company for the Canadian National Railways (the Beardmore Tornado engine was subsequently used in the R101 airship). Some of those series for regional traffic were begun with gasoline motors and then continued with diesel motors, such as Hungarian BCmot (The class code doesn't tell anything but "railmotor with 2nd and 3rd class seats".), 128 cars built 1926–1937, or German Wismar railbuses (57 cars 1932–1941). In France, the first diesel railcar was Renault VH, 115 units produced 1933/34. In Italy, after six Gasoline cars since 1931, Fiat and Breda built a lot of diesel railmotors, more than 110 from 1933 to 1938 and 390 from 1940 to 1953, Class 772 known as Littorina, and Class ALn 900.

High-speed railcars

In the 1930s, streamlined highspeed diesel railcars were developed in several countries:

  • In Germany, the Flying Hamburger was built in 1932. After a test ride in December 1932, this two-coach diesel railcar (in English terminology a DMU2) started service at Deutsche Reichsbahn (DRG) in February 1933. It became the prototype of DRG Class SVT 137 with 33 more highspeed DMUs, built for DRG till 1938, 13 DMU 2 ("Hamburg" series), 18 DMU 3 ("Leipzig" and "Köln" series), and two DMU 4 ("Berlin" series).
  • French SNCF classes XF 1000 and XF 1100 comprised 11 high-speed DMUs, also called TAR, built 1934–1939.
  • In Hungary, Ganz Works built the Arpád railmotor [hu; de], a kind of a luxurious railbus in a series of seven items since 1934, and started to build the Hargita [hu] in 1944.

Further developments

In 1945, a batch of 30 Baldwin diesel–electric locomotives, Baldwin 0-6-6-0 1000, was delivered from the United States to the railways of the Soviet Union.

In 1947, the London, Midland and Scottish Railway (LMS) introduced the first of a pair of 1,600 hp (1,200 kW) Co-Co diesel–electric locomotives (later British Rail Class D16/1) for regular use in the United Kingdom, although British manufacturers such as Armstrong Whitworth had been exporting diesel locomotives since 1930. Fleet deliveries to British Railways, of other designs such as Class 20 and Class 31, began in 1957.

Series production of diesel locomotives in Italy began in the mid-1950s. Generally, diesel traction in Italy was of less importance than in other countries, as it was amongst the most advanced countries in the electrification of the main lines and as Italian geography makes freight transport by sea cheaper than rail transportation even on many domestic connections.

Early diesel locomotives and railcars in Asia

Japan

In Japan, starting in the 1920s, some petrol–electric railcars were produced. The first diesel–electric traction and the first air-streamed vehicles on Japanese rails were the two DMU3s of class Kiha 43000 (キハ43000系).[35] Japan's first series of diesel locomotives was class DD50 (国鉄DD50形), twin locomotives, developed since 1950 and in service since 1953.[36]

China

One of the first domestically-developed Diesel vehicles of China was the DMU Dongfeng (东风), produced in 1958 by CSR Sifang. Series production of China's first Diesel locomotive class, the DFH 1, began in 1964 following the construction of a prototype in 1959.

India

Early diesel locomotives and railcars in Australia

 
A Mckeen railcar in Wodonga, Australia, 1911

The Trans-Australian Railway built 1912 to 1917 by Commonwealth Railways (CR) passes through 2,000 km of waterless (or salt watered) desert terrain unsuitable for steam locomotives. The original engineer Henry Deane envisaged diesel operation to overcome such problems.[37] Some have suggested that the CR worked with the South Australian Railways to trial diesel traction.[38] However, the technology was not developed enough to be reliable.

As in Europe, the usage of internal combustion engines advanced more readily in self-propelled railcars than in locomotives.

  • Some Australian railway companies bought McKeen railmotors.
  • In the 1920s and 1930s, more reliable Gasoline railmotors were built by Australian industries.
  • Australia's first diesel railcars were the NSWGR 100 Class (PH later DP) Silver City Comet cars in 1937.[39]
  • High-speed vehicles for those days' possibilities on 3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm) were the ten Vulcan railcars of 1940 for New Zealand.

Transmission types

Unlike steam engines, internal combustion engines require a transmission to power the wheels. The engine must be allowed to continue to run when the locomotive is stopped.

Diesel–mechanical

 
Schematic illustration of a diesel mechanical locomotive

A diesel–mechanical locomotive uses a mechanical transmission in a fashion similar to that employed in most road vehicles. This type of transmission is generally limited to low-powered, low speed shunting (switching) locomotives, lightweight multiple units and self-propelled railcars.

 
A British Rail Class 03 diesel–mechanical shunter with a jackshaft under the cab.

The mechanical transmissions used for railroad propulsion are generally more complex and much more robust than standard-road versions. There is usually a fluid coupling interposed between the engine and gearbox, and the gearbox is often of the epicyclic (planetary) type to permit shifting while under load. Various systems have been devised to minimise the break in transmission during gear changing; e.g., the S.S.S. (synchro-self-shifting) gearbox used by Hudswell Clarke.

Diesel–mechanical propulsion is limited by the difficulty of building a reasonably sized transmission capable of coping with the power and torque required to move a heavy train. A number of attempts to use diesel–mechanical propulsion in high power applications have been made (e.g., the 1,500 kW (2,000 hp) British Rail 10100 locomotive), although none have proved successful in the end.

Diesel–electric

 
Schematic diagram of a diesel–electric locomotive

In a diesel–electric locomotive, the diesel engine drives either an electrical DC generator (generally, less than 3,000 hp (2,200 kW) net for traction), or an electrical AC alternator-rectifier (generally 3,000 hp net or more for traction), the output of which provides power to the traction motors that drive the locomotive. There is no mechanical connection between the diesel engine and the wheels.

The important components of diesel–electric propulsion are the diesel engine (also known as the prime mover), the main generator/alternator-rectifier, traction motors (usually with four or six axles), and a control system consisting of the engine governor and electrical or electronic components, including switchgear, rectifiers and other components, which control or modify the electrical supply to the traction motors. In the most elementary case, the generator may be directly connected to the motors with only very simple switchgear.

 
The EMD F40PH (left) and MPI MPXpress-series MP36PH-3S (right) locomotives coupled together by Metra use diesel–electric transmission.
 
Soviet 2TE10M locomotive
 
Czech Class 742 and 743 locomotive

Originally, the traction motors and generator were DC machines. Following the development of high-capacity silicon rectifiers in the 1960s, the DC generator was replaced by an alternator using a diode bridge to convert its output to DC. This advance greatly improved locomotive reliability and decreased generator maintenance costs by elimination of the commutator and brushes in the generator. Elimination of the brushes and commutator, in turn, eliminated the possibility of a particularly destructive type of event referred to as a flashover (also known as an arc fault), which could result in immediate generator failure and, in some cases, start an engine room fire.

Current North American practice is for four axles for high-speed passenger or "time" freight, or for six axles for lower-speed or "manifest" freight. The most modern units on "time" freight service tend to have six axles underneath the frame. Unlike those in "manifest" service, "time" freight units will have only four of the axles connected to traction motors, with the other two as idler axles for weight distribution.

In the late 1980s, the development of high-power variable-voltage/variable-frequency (VVVF) drives, or "traction inverters", allowed the use of polyphase AC traction motors, thereby also eliminating the motor commutator and brushes. The result is a more efficient and reliable drive that requires relatively little maintenance and is better able to cope with overload conditions that often destroyed the older types of motors.

 
Engineer's controls in a diesel–electric locomotive cab. The lever near bottom-centre is the throttle and the lever visible at bottom left is the automatic brake valve control.

Diesel–electric control

 
MLW model S-3 produced in 1957 for the CPR adhering to designs by ALCO.

A diesel–electric locomotive's power output is independent of road speed, as long as the unit's generator current and voltage limits are not exceeded. Therefore, the unit's ability to develop tractive effort (also referred to as drawbar pull or tractive force, which is what actually propels the train) will tend to inversely vary with speed within these limits. (See power curve below). Maintaining acceptable operating parameters was one of the principal design considerations that had to be solved in early diesel–electric locomotive development and, ultimately, led to the complex control systems in place on modern units.

Throttle operation

 
Cab of the Russian locomotive 2TE116U. "11" indicates the throttle.

The prime mover's power output is primarily determined by its rotational speed (RPM) and fuel rate, which are regulated by a governor or similar mechanism. The governor is designed to react to both the throttle setting, as determined by the engine driver and the speed at which the prime mover is running (see Control theory).

Locomotive power output, and therefore speed, is typically controlled by the engine driver using a stepped or "notched" throttle that produces binary-like electrical signals corresponding to throttle position. This basic design lends itself well to multiple unit (MU) operation by producing discrete conditions that assure that all units in a consist respond in the same way to throttle position. Binary encoding also helps to minimize the number of trainlines (electrical connections) that are required to pass signals from unit to unit. For example, only four trainlines are required to encode all possible throttle positions if there are up to 14 stages of throttling.

North American locomotives, such as those built by EMD or General Electric, have eight throttle positions or "notches" as well as a "reverser" to allow them to operate bi-directionally. Many UK-built locomotives have a ten-position throttle. The power positions are often referred to by locomotive crews depending upon the throttle setting, such as "run 3" or "notch 3".

In older locomotives, the throttle mechanism was ratcheted so that it was not possible to advance more than one power position at a time. The engine driver could not, for example, pull the throttle from notch 2 to notch 4 without stopping at notch 3. This feature was intended to prevent rough train handling due to abrupt power increases caused by rapid throttle motion ("throttle stripping", an operating rules violation on many railroads). Modern locomotives no longer have this restriction, as their control systems are able to smoothly modulate power and avoid sudden changes in train loading regardless of how the engine driver operates the controls.

When the throttle is in the idle position, the prime mover receives minimal fuel, causing it to idle at low RPM. In addition, the traction motors are not connected to the main generator and the generator's field windings are not excited (energized) – the generator does not produce electricity without excitation. Therefore, the locomotive will be in "neutral". Conceptually, this is the same as placing an automobile's transmission into neutral while the engine is running.

To set the locomotive in motion, the reverser control handle is placed into the correct position (forward or reverse), the brake is released and the throttle is moved to the run 1 position (the first power notch). An experienced engine driver can accomplish these steps in a coordinated fashion that will result in a nearly imperceptible start. The positioning of the reverser and movement of the throttle together is conceptually like shifting an automobile's automatic transmission into gear while the engine is idling.

Placing the throttle into the first power position will cause the traction motors to be connected to the main generator and the latter's field coils to be excited. With excitation applied, the main generator will deliver electricity to the traction motors, resulting in motion. If the locomotive is running "light" (that is, not coupled to the rest of a train) and is not on an ascending grade, it will easily accelerate. On the other hand, if a long train is being started, the locomotive may stall as soon as some of the slack has been taken up, as the drag imposed by the train will exceed the tractive force being developed. An experienced engine driver will be able to recognize an incipient stall and will gradually advance the throttle as required to maintain the pace of acceleration.

As the throttle is moved to higher power notches, the fuel rate to the prime mover will increase, resulting in a corresponding increase in RPM and horsepower output. At the same time, main generator field excitation will be proportionally increased to absorb the higher power. This will translate into increased electrical output to the traction motors, with a corresponding increase in tractive force. Eventually, depending on the requirements of the train's schedule, the engine driver will have moved the throttle to the position of maximum power and will maintain it there until the train has accelerated to the desired speed.

The propulsion system is designed to produce maximum traction motor torque at start-up, which explains why modern locomotives are capable of starting trains weighing in excess of 15,000 tons, even on ascending grades. Current technology allows a locomotive to develop as much as 30% of its loaded driver weight in tractive force, amounting to 120,000 pounds-force (530 kN) of tractive force for a large, six-axle freight (goods) unit. In fact, a consist of such units can produce more than enough drawbar pull at start-up to damage or derail cars (if on a curve) or break couplers (the latter being referred to in North American railroad slang as "jerking a lung"). Therefore, it is incumbent upon the engine driver to carefully monitor the amount of power being applied at start-up to avoid damage. In particular, "jerking a lung" could be a calamitous matter if it were to occur on an ascending grade, except that the safety inherent in the correct operation of fail-safe automatic train brakes installed in wagons today, prevents runaway trains by automatically applying the wagon brakes when train line air pressure drops.

Propulsion system operation

 
Typical main generator constant power curve at "notch 8"
 
Left corridor of power compartment of Russian locomotive 2TE116U, 3 – alternator, 4 – rectifier, 6 – diesel

A locomotive's control system is designed so that the main generator electrical power output is matched to any given engine speed. Given the innate characteristics of traction motors, as well as the way in which the motors are connected to the main generator, the generator will produce high current and low voltage at low locomotive speeds, gradually changing to low current and high voltage as the locomotive accelerates. Therefore, the net power produced by the locomotive will remain constant for any given throttle setting (see power curve graph for notch 8).

In older designs, the prime mover's governor and a companion device, the load regulator, play a central role in the control system. The governor has two external inputs: requested engine speed, determined by the engine driver's throttle setting, and actual engine speed (feedback). The governor has two external control outputs: fuel injector setting, which determines the engine fuel rate, and current regulator position, which affects main generator excitation. The governor also incorporates a separate overspeed protective mechanism that will immediately cut off the fuel supply to the injectors and sound an alarm in the cab in the event the prime mover exceeds a defined RPM. Not all of these inputs and outputs are necessarily electrical.

 
Russian diesel locomotive TEP80
 
An EMD 12-567B 12-cylinder 2-stroke diesel engine (foreground; square "hand holes"), stored pending rebuild, and missing some components, with a 16-567C or D 16-cylinder engine (background; round "hand holes").

As the load on the engine changes, its rotational speed will also change. This is detected by the governor through a change in the engine speed feedback signal. The net effect is to adjust both the fuel rate and the load regulator position so that engine RPM and torque (and therefore power output) will remain constant for any given throttle setting, regardless of actual road speed.

In newer designs controlled by a "traction computer," each engine speed step is allotted an appropriate power output, or "kW reference", in software. The computer compares this value with actual main generator power output, or "kW feedback", calculated from traction motor current and main generator voltage feedback values. The computer adjusts the feedback value to match the reference value by controlling the excitation of the main generator, as described above. The governor still has control of engine speed, but the load regulator no longer plays a central role in this type of control system. However, the load regulator is retained as a "back-up" in case of engine overload. Modern locomotives fitted with electronic fuel injection (EFI) may have no mechanical governor; however, a "virtual" load regulator and governor are retained with computer modules.

Traction motor performance is controlled either by varying the DC voltage output of the main generator, for DC motors, or by varying the frequency and voltage output of the VVVF for AC motors. With DC motors, various connection combinations are utilized to adapt the drive to varying operating conditions.

At standstill, main generator output is initially low voltage/high current, often in excess of 1000 amperes per motor at full power. When the locomotive is at or near standstill, current flow will be limited only by the DC resistance of the motor windings and interconnecting circuitry, as well as the capacity of the main generator itself. Torque in a series-wound motor is approximately proportional to the square of the current. Hence, the traction motors will produce their highest torque, causing the locomotive to develop maximum tractive effort, enabling it to overcome the inertia of the train. This effect is analogous to what happens in an automobile automatic transmission at start-up, where it is in first gear and thereby producing maximum torque multiplication.

As the locomotive accelerates, the now-rotating motor armatures will start to generate a counter-electromotive force (back EMF, meaning the motors are also trying to act as generators), which will oppose the output of the main generator and cause traction motor current to decrease. Main generator voltage will correspondingly increase in an attempt to maintain motor power, but will eventually reach a plateau. At this point, the locomotive will essentially cease to accelerate, unless on a downgrade. Since this plateau will usually be reached at a speed substantially less than the maximum that may be desired, something must be done to change the drive characteristics to allow continued acceleration. This change is referred to as "transition", a process that is analogous to shifting gears in an automobile.

Transition methods include:

  • Series / Parallel or "motor transition".
    • Initially, pairs of motors are connected in series across the main generator. At higher speed, motors are reconnected in parallel across the main generator.
  • "Field shunting", "field diverting", or "weak fielding".
    • Resistance is connected in parallel with the motor field. This has the effect of increasing the armature current, producing a corresponding increase in motor torque and speed.

Both methods may also be combined, to increase the operating speed range.

  • Generator / rectifier transition
    • Reconnecting the two separate internal main generator stator windings of two rectifiers from parallel to series to increase the output voltage.

In older locomotives, it was necessary for the engine driver to manually execute transition by use of a separate control. As an aid to performing transition at the right time, the load meter (an indicator that shows the engine driver how much current is being drawn by the traction motors) was calibrated to indicate at which points forward or backward transition should take place. Automatic transition was subsequently developed to produce better-operating efficiency and to protect the main generator and traction motors from overloading from improper transition.

Modern locomotives incorporate traction inverters, AC to DC, capable of delivering 1,200 volts (earlier traction generators, DC to DC, were capable of delivering only 600 volts). This improvement was accomplished largely through improvements in silicon diode technology. With the capability of delivering 1,200 volts to the traction motors, the need for "transition" was eliminated.

Dynamic braking

A common option on diesel–electric locomotives is dynamic (rheostatic) braking.

Dynamic braking takes advantage of the fact that the traction motor armatures are always rotating when the locomotive is in motion and that a motor can be made to act as a generator by separately exciting the field winding. When dynamic braking is utilized, the traction control circuits are configured as follows:

  • The field winding of each traction motor is connected across the main generator.
  • The armature of each traction motor is connected across a forced-air-cooled resistance grid (the dynamic braking grid) in the roof of the locomotive's hood.
  • The prime mover RPM is increased and the main generator field is excited, causing a corresponding excitation of the traction motor fields.

The aggregate effect of the above is to cause each traction motor to generate electric power and dissipate it as heat in the dynamic braking grid. A fan connected across the grid provides forced-air cooling. Consequently, the fan is powered by the output of the traction motors and will tend to run faster and produce more airflow as more energy is applied to the grid.

Ultimately, the source of the energy dissipated in the dynamic braking grid is the motion of the locomotive as imparted to the traction motor armatures. Therefore, the traction motors impose drag and the locomotive acts as a brake. As speed decreases, the braking effect decays and usually becomes ineffective below approximately 16 km/h (10 mph), depending on the gear ratio between the traction motors and axles.

Dynamic braking is particularly beneficial when operating in mountainous regions; where there is always the danger of a runaway due to overheated friction brakes during descent. In such cases, dynamic brakes are usually applied in conjunction with the air brakes, the combined effect being referred to as blended braking. The use of blended braking can also assist in keeping the slack in a long train stretched as it crests a grade, helping to prevent a "run-in", an abrupt bunching of train slack that can cause a derailment. Blended braking is also commonly used with commuter trains to reduce wear and tear on the mechanical brakes that is a natural result of the numerous stops such trains typically make during a run.

Electro-diesel

 
Metro-North's GE Genesis P32AC-DM electro-diesel locomotive can also operate off of third-rail electrification.

These special locomotives can operate as an electric locomotive or as a diesel locomotive. The Long Island Rail Road, Metro-North Railroad and New Jersey Transit Rail Operations operate dual-mode diesel–electric/third-rail (catenary on NJTransit) locomotives between non-electrified territory and New York City because of a local law banning diesel-powered locomotives in Manhattan tunnels. For the same reason, Amtrak operates a fleet of dual-mode locomotives in the New York area. British Rail operated dual diesel–electric/electric locomotives designed to run primarily as electric locomotives with reduced power available when running on diesel power. This allowed railway yards to remain unelectrified, as the third rail power system is extremely hazardous in a yard area.

Diesel–hydraulic

 
JNR DD51 1 diesel-hydraulic

Diesel–hydraulic locomotives use one or more torque converters, in combination with fixed ratio gears. Drive shafts and gears form the final drive to convey the power from the torque converters to the wheels, and to effect reverse. The difference between hydraulic and mechanical systems is where the speed and torque is adjusted. In the mechanical transmission system that has multiple ratios such as in a gear box, if there is a hydraulic section, it is only to allow the engine to run when the train is too slow or stopped. In the hydraulic system, hydraulics are the primary system for adapting engine speed and torque to the train's situation, with gear selection for only limited use, such as reverse gear.

Hydrostatic transmission

Hydraulic drive systems using a hydrostatic hydraulic drive system have been applied to rail use. Modern examples included 350 to 750 hp (260 to 560 kW) shunting locomotives by Cockerill (Belgium),[40] 4 to 12 tonne 35 to 58 kW (47 to 78 hp) narrow gauge industrial locomotives by Atlas Copco subsidiary GIA.[41] Hydrostatic drives are also utilised in railway maintenance machines (tampers, rail grinders).[42]

Application of hydrostatic transmissions is generally limited to small shunting locomotives and rail maintenance equipment, as well as being used for non-tractive applications in diesel engines such as drives for traction motor fans.[citation needed]

Hydrokinetic transmission

 
DB class V 200 diesel–hydraulic
 
A Henschel (Germany) diesel–hydraulic locomotive in Medan, North Sumatra

Hydrokinetic transmission (also called hydrodynamic transmission) uses a torque converter. A torque converter consists of three main parts, two of which rotate, and one (the stator) that has a lock preventing backwards rotation and adding output torque by redirecting the oil flow at low output RPM. All three main parts are sealed in an oil-filled housing. To match engine speed to load speed over the entire speed range of a locomotive some additional method is required to give sufficient range. One method is to follow the torque converter with a mechanical gearbox which switches ratios automatically, similar to an automatic transmission in an automobile. Another method is to provide several torque converters each with a range of variability covering part of the total required; all the torque converters are mechanically connected all the time, and the appropriate one for the speed range required is selected by filling it with oil and draining the others. The filling and draining is carried out with the transmission under load, and results in very smooth range changes with no break in the transmitted power.

Locomotives
 
British Rail diesel–hydraulic locomotives: Class 52 "Western", Class 42 "Warship" and Class 35 "Hymek"

Diesel-hydraulic locomotives are less efficient than diesel–electrics. The first-generation BR diesel hydraulics were significantly less efficient (c. 65%) than diesel electrics (c. 80%),[citation needed] Moreover, initial versions were found in many countries to be mechanically more complicated and more likely to break down.[citation needed] Hydraulic transmission for locomotives was developed in Germany.[citation needed] There is still debate over the relative merits of hydraulic vs. electrical transmission systems: advantages claimed for hydraulic systems include lower weight, high reliability, and lower capital cost.[citation needed]

By the 21st century, for diesel locomotive traction worldwide the majority of countries used diesel–electric designs, with diesel-hydraulic designs not found in use outside Germany and Japan, and some neighbouring states, where it is used in designs for freight work.

In Germany and Finland, diesel–hydraulic systems have achieved high reliability in operation.[citation needed] In the UK the diesel–hydraulic principle gained a poor reputation due to the poor durability and reliability of the Maybach Mekydro hydraulic transmission.[citation needed] Argument continues over the relative reliability of hydraulic systems, with questions over whether data has been manipulated to favour local suppliers over non-German ones.[citation needed]

Multiple units

Diesel–hydraulic drive is common in multiple units, with various transmission designs used including Voith torque converters, and fluid couplings in combination with mechanical gearing.

The majority of British Rail's second generation passenger DMU stock used hydraulic transmission. In the 21st century, designs using hydraulic transmission include Bombardier's Turbostar, Talent, RegioSwinger families; diesel engined versions of the Siemens Desiro platform, and the Stadler Regio-Shuttle.

Examples
 
A VR Class Dv12 diesel–hydraulic locomotive
 
A GMD GMDH-1 diesel–hydraulic locomotive

Diesel–hydraulic locomotives have a smaller market share than those with diesel–electric transmission – the main worldwide user of main-line hydraulic transmissions was the Federal Republic of Germany, with designs including the 1950s DB class V 200, and the 1960 and 1970s DB Class V 160 family. British Rail introduced a number of diesel-hydraulic designs during its 1955 Modernisation Plan, initially license-built versions of German designs (see Category:Diesel–hydraulic locomotives of Great Britain). In Spain, Renfe used high power to weight ratio twin-engine German designs to haul high speed trains from the 1960s to 1990s. (See Renfe Classes 340, 350, 352, 353, 354)

Other main-line locomotives of the post-war period included the 1950s GMD GMDH-1 experimental locomotives; the Henschel & Son built South African Class 61-000; in the 1960s Southern Pacific bought 18 Krauss-Maffei KM ML-4000 diesel–hydraulic locomotives. The Denver & Rio Grande Western Railroad also bought three, all of which were later sold to SP.[43]

In Finland, over 200 Finnish-built VR class Dv12 and Dr14 diesel–hydraulics with Voith transmissions have been continuously used since the early 1960s. All units of Dr14 class and most units of Dv12 class are still in service. VR has abandoned some weak-conditioned units of 2700 series Dv12s.[44]

In the 21st century series production standard gauge diesel–hydraulic designs include the Voith Gravita, ordered by Deutsche Bahn, and the Vossloh G2000 BB, G1206 and G1700 designs, all manufactured in Germany for freight use.

Diesel–steam

 
Soviet Locomotive TP1

Steam-diesel hybrid locomotives can use steam generated from a boiler or diesel to power a piston engine. The Cristiani Compressed Steam System used a diesel engine to power a compressor to drive and recirculate steam produced by a boiler; effectively using steam as the power transmission medium, with the diesel engine being the prime mover[45]

Diesel–pneumatic

The diesel-pneumatic locomotive was of interest in the 1930s because it offered the possibility of converting existing steam locomotives to diesel operation. The frame and cylinders of the steam locomotive would be retained and the boiler would be replaced by a diesel engine driving an air compressor. The problem was low thermal efficiency because of the large amount of energy wasted as heat in the air compressor. Attempts were made to compensate for this by using the diesel exhaust to re-heat the compressed air but these had limited success. A German proposal of 1929 did result in a prototype[46] but a similar British proposal of 1932, to use an LNER Class R1 locomotive, never got beyond the design stage.

Multiple-unit operation

 
Diesel–electric locomotive built by EMD for service in the UK and continental Europe.

Most diesel locomotives are capable of multiple-unit operation (MU) as a means of increasing horsepower and tractive effort when hauling heavy trains. All North American locomotives, including export models, use a standardized AAR electrical control system interconnected by a 27-pin MU cable between the units. For UK-built locomotives, a number of incompatible control systems are used, but the most common is the Blue Star system, which is electro-pneumatic and fitted to most early diesel classes. A small number of types, typically higher-powered locomotives intended for passenger only work, do not have multiple control systems. In all cases, the electrical control connections made common to all units in a consist are referred to as trainlines. The result is that all locomotives in a consist behave as one in response to the engine driver's control movements.

The ability to couple diesel–electric locomotives in an MU fashion was first introduced in the EMC EA/EB of 1937. Electrical interconnections were made so one engine driver could operate the entire consist from the head-end unit.

In mountainous regions, it is common to interpose helper locomotives in the middle of the train, both to provide the extra power needed to ascend a grade and to limit the amount of stress applied to the draft gear of the car coupled to the head-end power. The helper units in such distributed power configurations are controlled from the lead unit's cab through coded radio signals. Although this is technically not an MU configuration, the behaviour is the same as with physically interconnected units.

Cab arrangements

Cab arrangements vary by builder and operator. Practice in the U.S. has traditionally been for a cab at one end of the locomotive with limited visibility if the locomotive is not operated cab forward. This is not usually a problem as U.S. locomotives are usually operated in pairs, or threes, and arranged so that a cab is at each end of each set. European practice is usually for a cab at each end of the locomotive as trains are usually light enough to operate with one locomotive. Early U.S. practice was to add power units without cabs (booster or B units) and the arrangement was often A-B, A-A, A-B-A, A-B-B, or A-B-B-A where A was a unit with a cab. Center cabs were sometimes used for switch locomotives.

Cow-calf

In North American railroading, a cow-calf set is a pair of switcher-type locomotives: one (the cow) equipped with a driving cab, the other (the calf) without a cab, and controlled from the cow through cables. Cow-calf sets are used in heavy switching and hump yard service. Some are radio controlled without an operating engineer present in the cab. This arrangement is also known as master–slave. Where two connected units were present, EMD called these TR-2s (approximately 2,000 hp or 1,500 kW); where three units, TR-3s (approximately 3,000 hp or 2,200 kW).

Cow-calves have largely disappeared as these engine combinations exceeded their economic lifetimes many years ago.

Present North American practice is to pair two 3,000 hp GP40-2 or SD40-2 road switchers, often nearly worn-out and very soon ready for rebuilding or scrapping, and to utilize these for so-called "transfer" uses, for which the TR-2, TR-3 and TR-4 engines were originally intended, hence the designation TR, for "transfer".

Occasionally, the second unit may have its prime-mover and traction alternator removed and replaced by concrete or steel ballast and the power for traction obtained from the master unit. As a 16-cylinder prime-mover generally weighs in the 36,000-pound (16,000 kg) range, and a 3,000 hp traction alternator generally weighs in the 18,000-pound (8,200 kg) range, this would mean that 54,000 lb (24,000 kg) would be needed for ballast.

A pair of fully capable "Dash 2" units would be rated 6,000 hp (4,500 kW). A "Dash 2" pair where only one had a prime-mover/alternator would be rated 3,000 hp, with all power provided by master, but the combination benefits from the tractive effort provided by the slave as engines in transfer service are seldom called upon to provide 3,000 hp much less 6,000 hp on a continuous basis.

Fittings and appliances

Flameproofing

A standard diesel locomotive presents a very low fire risk but "flame proofing" can reduce the risk even further. This involves fitting a water-filled box to the exhaust pipe to quench any red-hot carbon particles that may be emitted. Other precautions may include a fully insulated electrical system (neither side earthed to the frame) and all electric wiring enclosed in conduit.

The flameproof diesel locomotive has replaced the fireless steam locomotive in areas of high fire risk such as oil refineries and ammunition dumps. Preserved examples of flameproof diesel locomotives include:

Latest development of the "Flameproof Diesel Vehicle Applied New Exhaust Gas Dry Type Treatment System" does not need the water supply.[48]

Lights

 
A Canadian National Railway train showing the placement of the headlight and ditch lights on the locomotive.

The lights fitted to diesel locomotives vary from country to country. North American locomotives are fitted with two headlights (for safety in case one malfunctions) and a pair of ditch lights. The latter are fitted low down at the front and are designed to make the locomotive easily visible as it approaches a grade crossing. Older locomotives may be fitted with a Gyralite or Mars Light instead of the ditch lights.

Environmental impact

Although diesel locomotives generally emit less sulphur dioxide, a major pollutant to the environment, and greenhouse gases than steam locomotives, they are not completely clean in that respect.[49] Furthermore, like other diesel powered vehicles, they emit nitrogen oxides and fine particles, which are a risk to public health. In fact, in this last respect diesel locomotives may perform worse than steam locomotives.

For years, it was thought by American government scientists who measure air pollution that diesel locomotive engines were relatively clean and emitted far less health-threatening emissions than those of diesel trucks or other vehicles; however, the scientists discovered that because they used faulty estimates of the amount of fuel consumed by diesel locomotives, they grossly understated the amount of pollution generated annually. After revising their calculations, they concluded that the annual emissions of nitrogen oxide, a major ingredient in smog and acid rain, and soot would be by 2030 nearly twice what they originally assumed.[50][51] In Europe, where most major railways have been electrified, there is less concern.

This would mean that in the USA diesel locomotives would be releasing more than 800,000 tons of nitrogen oxide and 25,000 tons of soot every year within a quarter of a century, in contrast to the EPA's previous projections of 480,000 tons of nitrogen dioxide and 12,000 tons of soot. Since this was discovered, to reduce the effects of the diesel locomotive on humans (who are breathing the noxious emissions) and on plants and animals, it is considered practical to install traps in the diesel engines to reduce pollution levels[52] and other methods of pollution control (e.g., use of biodiesel).

Diesel locomotive pollution has been of particular concern in the city of Chicago. The Chicago Tribune reported levels of diesel soot inside locomotives leaving Chicago at levels hundreds of times above what is normally found on streets outside.[53] Residents of several neighborhoods are most likely exposed to diesel emissions at levels several times higher than the national average for urban areas.[54]

Mitigation

In 2008, the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) mandated regulations requiring all new or refurbished diesel locomotives to meet Tier II pollution standards that slash the amount of allowable soot by 90% and require an 80% reduction in nitrogen oxide emissions. See List of low emissions locomotives.

Other technologies that are being deployed to reduce locomotive emissions and fuel consumption include "Genset" switching locomotives and hybrid Green Goat designs. Genset locomotives use multiple smaller high-speed diesel engines and generators (generator sets), rather than a single medium-speed diesel engine and a single generator.[55] Because of the cost of developing clean engines, these smaller high-speed engines are based on already developed truck engines. Green Goats are a type of hybrid switching locomotive utilizing a small diesel engine and a large bank of rechargeable batteries.[56][57] Switching locomotives are of particular concern as they typically operate in a limited area, often in or near urban centers, and spend much of their time idling. Both designs reduce pollution below EPA Tier II standards and cut or eliminate emissions during idle.

Advantages over steam

As diesel locomotives advanced, the cost of manufacturing and operating them dropped, and they became cheaper to own and operate than steam locomotives. In North America, steam locomotives were custom-made for specific railway routes, so economies of scale were difficult to achieve.[58] Though more complex to produce with exacting manufacturing tolerances (110000-inch or 0.0025-millimetre for diesel, compared with 1100-inch (0.25 mm) for steam), diesel locomotive parts were easier to mass-produce. Baldwin Locomotive Works offered almost 500 steam models in its heyday, while EMD offered fewer than ten diesel varieties.[59] In the United Kingdom, British Railways built steam locomotives to standard designs from 1951 onwards. These included standard, interchangeable parts, making them cheaper to produce than the diesel locomotives then available. The capital cost per drawbar horse power was £13 6s (steam), £65 (diesel), £69 7s (turbine) and £17 13s (electric).[60]

Diesel locomotives offer significant operating advantages over steam locomotives.[61] They can safely be operated by one person, making them ideal for switching/shunting duties in yards (although for safety reasons many main-line diesel locomotives continue to have two-person crews: an engineer and a conductor/switchman) and the operating environment is much more attractive, being quieter, fully weatherproof and without the dirt and heat that is an inevitable part of operating a steam locomotive. Diesel locomotives can be worked in multiple with a single crew controlling multiple locomotives in a single train – something not practical with steam locomotives. This brought greater efficiencies to the operator, as individual locomotives could be relatively low-powered for use as a single unit on light duties but marshaled together to provide the power needed on a heavy train. With steam traction, a single very powerful and expensive locomotive was required for the heaviest trains or the operator resorted to double heading with multiple locomotives and crews, a method which was also expensive and brought with it its own operating difficulties.

Diesel engines can be started and stopped almost instantly, meaning that a diesel locomotive has the potential to incur no fuel costs when not being used. However, it is still the practice of large North American railroads to use straight water as a coolant in diesel engines instead of coolants that incorporate anti-freezing properties; this results in diesel locomotives being left idling when parked in cold climates instead of being completely shut down. A diesel engine can be left idling unattended for hours or even days, especially since practically every diesel engine used in locomotives has systems that automatically shut the engine down if problems such as a loss of oil pressure or coolant loss occur. Automatic start/stop systems are available which monitor coolant and engine temperatures. When the unit is close to having its coolant freeze, the system restarts the diesel engine to warm the coolant and other systems.[62]

Steam locomotives require intensive maintenance, lubrication, and cleaning before, during, and after use. Preparing and firing a steam locomotive for use from cold can take many hours. They can be kept in readiness between uses with a low fire, but this requires regular stoking and frequent attention to maintain the level of water in the boiler. This may be necessary to prevent the water in the boiler freezing in cold climates, so long as the water supply is not frozen. After use a steam locomotive requires a lengthy disposal operation to perform cleaning, inspection, maintenance and refilling with water and fuel before it is ready for its next duty. By contrast, as early as 1939 EMD was promoting its FT Series locomotive as needing no maintenance between 30-day inspections beyond refuelling and basic fluid level and safety checks which could be performed with the prime mover still running. Railways converting from steam to diesel operation in the 1940s and 1950s found that for a given period diesel locomotives were available for, on average, three or four times more revenue-earning hours than equivalent steam locomotives, allowing locomotive fleets to be cut drastically in size while maintaining operational capacity.[citation needed]

The maintenance and operational costs of steam locomotives were much higher than diesels. Annual maintenance costs for steam locomotives accounted for 25% of the initial purchase price. Spare parts were cast from wooden masters for specific locomotives. The sheer number of unique steam locomotives meant that there was no feasible way for spare-part inventories to be maintained.[63] With diesel locomotives spare parts could be mass-produced and held in stock ready for use and many parts and sub-assemblies could be standardized across an operator's fleet using different models of locomotive from the same builder. Modern diesel locomotive engines are designed to allow the power assemblies (systems of working parts and their block interfaces) to be replaced while keeping the main block in the locomotive, which greatly reduces the time that a locomotive is out of revenue-generating service when it requires maintenance.[28]

Steam engines required large quantities of coal and water, which were expensive variable operating costs.[64] Further, the thermal efficiency of steam was considerably less than that of diesel engines. Diesel's theoretical studies demonstrated potential thermal efficiencies for a compression ignition engine of 36% (compared with 6–10% for steam), and an 1897 one-cylinder prototype operated at a remarkable 26% efficiency.[65]

However, one study published in 1959 suggested that many of the comparisons between diesel and steam locomotives were made unfairly, mostly because diesels were a newer technology. After painstaking analysis of financial records and technological progress, the author found that if research had continued on steam technology instead of diesel, there would be negligible financial benefit in converting to diesel locomotion.[66]

By the mid-1960s, diesel locomotives had effectively replaced steam locomotives where electric traction was not in use.[64] Attempts to develop advanced steam technology continue in the 21st century, but have not had a significant effect.

See also

References

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  2. ^ Arnold Heller: Der Automobilmotor im Eisenbahnbetriebe, Leipzig 1906, reprinted by Salzwasserverlag 2011, ISBN 978-3-86444-240-7
  3. ^ Röll: Enzyklopädie des EisenbahnwesensElektrische Eisenbahnen, there go to VII. Automobile Triebwagenzu b Benzin-, Benzol- oder Gasolin-elektrischen Triebwagen
  4. ^ Raymond S Zeitler, American School (Chicago, Ill.): Self-Contained Railway Motor Cars and Locomotives, section SELF-CONTAINED RAILWAY CARS 57–59
  5. ^ Röll: Arader und Csanáder Eisenbahnen Vereinigte Aktien-Gesellschaft
  6. ^ Museal railcars of BHÉV and their history
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  22. ^ Evolution of the American Diesel Locomotive, J Parker Lamb 2007, Indiana University Press, ISBN 978-0-253-34863-0, p.29
  23. ^ Churella 1998, pp. 28–30.
  24. ^ "Railroads To Try Diesel Locomotive", Special to the New York Times, p. 1, February 18, 1925
  25. ^ Pinkepank 1973, p. 283.
  26. ^ Churella 1998, p. 27.
  27. ^ Pinkepank 1973, p. 409.
  28. ^ a b Kettering, E.W. (29 November 1951). History and Development of the 567 Series General Motors Locomotive Engine. ASME 1951 Annual Meeting. Atlantic City, New Jersey: Electro-Motive Division, General Motors Corporation.
  29. ^ "Diesel Streamliners Now Link Coast-to-Coast" Popular Mechanics, August 1937
  30. ^ Pinkepank 1973, p. 209–211.
  31. ^ Solomon, Brian, Locomotive, 2001, pp 120, 130
  32. ^ "vecchia loco ferrovie della Calabria – Ferrovie.it". www.ferrovie.it.
  33. ^ Messerschmitt, Wolfgang (1969). Geschichte der italienischen Elektro- und Diesellokomotiven [History of Italy's electric and Diesel locomotives] (in German). Zürich: Orell Füesli Verlag. pp. 101–102.
  34. ^ "The first russian diesel locos". izmerov.narod.ru.
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Sources

External links

  • US Government test of GP38-2 locomotive with biodiesel fuel.
  • A 1926 article The Diesel Engine in Railway Transportation on Diesel locomotives

diesel, locomotive, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, decembe. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Diesel locomotive news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message A diesel locomotive is a type of railway locomotive in which the prime mover is a diesel engine Several types of diesel locomotives have been developed differing mainly in the means by which mechanical power is conveyed to the driving wheels The CKD CME3 is one of the longest running and most manufactured diesel electric locomotives ever made The InterCity 125 the current confirmed record holder as the fastest diesel powered train at 148 mph 238 km h is made up of two power cars one at each end of a fixed formation of carriages capable of 125 mph 201 km h in regular service These Pacific National operated locos show three styles of diesel locomotive body box cab rear hood unit center and cab unit front Early internal combustion locomotives and railcars used kerosene and gasoline as their fuel Rudolf Diesel patented his first compression ignition engine 1 in 1898 and steady improvements to the design of diesel engines reduced their physical size and improved their power to weight ratios to a point where one could be mounted in a locomotive Internal combustion engines only operate efficiently within a limited power band and while low power gasoline engines could be coupled to mechanical transmissions the more powerful diesel engines required the development of new forms of transmission 2 3 4 5 6 This is because clutches would need to be very large at these power levels and would not fit in a standard 2 5 m 8 ft 2 in wide locomotive frame or wear too quickly to be useful The first successful diesel engines used diesel electric transmissions and by 1925 a small number of diesel locomotives of 600 hp 450 kW were in service in the United States In 1930 Armstrong Whitworth of the United Kingdom delivered two 1 200 hp 890 kW locomotives using Sulzer designed engines to Buenos Aires Great Southern Railway of Argentina In 1933 diesel electric technology developed by Maybach was used to propel the DRG Class SVT 877 a high speed intercity two car set and went into series production with other streamlined car sets in Germany starting in 1935 In the United States diesel electric propulsion was brought to high speed mainline passenger service in late 1934 largely through the research and development efforts of General Motors dating back to the late 1920s and advances in lightweight car body design by the Budd Company The economic recovery from World War II caused the widespread adoption of diesel locomotives in many countries They offered greater flexibility and performance than steam locomotives as well as substantially lower operating and maintenance costs 7 Contents 1 History 1 1 Adaptation for rail use 1 2 Early diesel locomotives and railcars in the United States 1 2 1 Early North American developments 1 2 2 First American series production locomotives 1 3 Early diesel locomotives and railcars in Europe 1 3 1 First functional diesel vehicles 1 3 2 Switchers 1 3 3 Diesel railcars for regional traffic 1 3 4 High speed railcars 1 3 5 Further developments 1 4 Early diesel locomotives and railcars in Asia 1 4 1 Japan 1 4 2 China 1 4 3 India 1 5 Early diesel locomotives and railcars in Australia 2 Transmission types 2 1 Diesel mechanical 2 2 Diesel electric 2 2 1 Diesel electric control 2 2 2 Throttle operation 2 2 3 Propulsion system operation 2 2 4 Dynamic braking 2 2 5 Electro diesel 2 3 Diesel hydraulic 2 3 1 Hydrostatic transmission 2 3 2 Hydrokinetic transmission 2 3 2 1 Locomotives 2 3 2 2 Multiple units 2 3 2 2 1 Examples 2 4 Diesel steam 2 5 Diesel pneumatic 3 Multiple unit operation 3 1 Cab arrangements 3 2 Cow calf 4 Fittings and appliances 4 1 Flameproofing 4 2 Lights 5 Environmental impact 5 1 Mitigation 6 Advantages over steam 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Sources 9 External linksHistory EditAdaptation for rail use Edit Diagram of Priestman oil engine from The Steam engine and gas and oil engines 1900 by John Perry Petrol electric Weitzer railmotor first 1903 series 1906 The earliest recorded example of the use of an internal combustion engine in a railway locomotive is the prototype designed by William Dent Priestman which was examined by William Thomson 1st Baron Kelvin in 1888 who described it as a Priestman oil engine mounted upon a truck which is worked on a temporary line of rails to show the adaptation of a petroleum engine for locomotive purposes 8 9 In 1894 a 20 hp 15 kW two axle machine built by Priestman Brothers was used on the Hull Docks 10 11 In 1896 an oil engined railway locomotive was built for the Royal Arsenal in Woolwich England using an engine designed by Herbert Akroyd Stuart 12 It was not a diesel because it used a hot bulb engine also known as a semi diesel but it was the precursor of the diesel Rudolf Diesel considered using his engine for powering locomotives in his 1893 book Theorie und Konstruktion eines rationellen Warmemotors zum Ersatz der Dampfmaschine und der heute bekannten Verbrennungsmotoren Theory and Construction of a Rational Heat Motor 13 However the massiveness and poor power to weight ratio of early diesel engines made them unsuitable for propelling land based vehicles Therefore the engine s potential as a railroad prime mover was not initially recognized 14 This changed as development reduced the size and weight of the engine In 1906 Rudolf Diesel Adolf Klose and the steam and diesel engine manufacturer Gebruder Sulzer founded Diesel Sulzer Klose GmbH to manufacture diesel powered locomotives Sulzer had been manufacturing diesel engines since 1898 The Prussian State Railways ordered a diesel locomotive from the company in 1909 and after test runs between Winterthur and Romanshorn Switzerland the diesel mechanical locomotive was delivered in Berlin in September 1912 The world s first diesel powered locomotive was operated in the summer of 1912 on the same line from Winterthur but was not a commercial success 15 During test runs in 1913 several problems were found The outbreak of World War I in 1914 prevented all further trials The locomotive weight was 95 tonnes and the power was 883 kW 1 184 hp with a maximum speed of 100 km h 62 mph 16 Small numbers of prototype diesel locomotives were produced in a number of countries through the mid 1920s Early diesel locomotives and railcars in the United States Edit Early North American developments Edit Adolphus Busch purchased the American manufacturing rights for the diesel engine in 1898 but never applied this new form of power to transportation He founded the Busch Sulzer company in 1911 Only limited success was achieved in the early twentieth century with internal combustion engined railcars due in part to difficulties with mechanical drive systems 17 General Electric GE entered the railcar market in the early twentieth century as Thomas Edison possessed a patent on the electric locomotive his design actually being a type of electrically propelled railcar 18 GE built its first electric locomotive prototype in 1895 However high electrification costs caused GE to turn its attention to internal combustion power to provide electricity for electric railcars Problems related to co ordinating the prime mover and electric motor were immediately encountered primarily due to limitations of the Ward Leonard current control system that had been chosen citation needed GE Rail was formed in 1907 and 112 years later in 2019 was purchased by and merged with Wabtec A significant breakthrough occurred in 1914 when Hermann Lemp a GE electrical engineer developed and patented a reliable control system that controlled the engine and traction motor with a single lever subsequent improvements were also patented by Lemp 19 Lemp s design solved the problem of overloading and damaging the traction motors with excessive electrical power at low speeds and was the prototype for all internal combustion electric drive control systems In 1917 1918 GE produced three experimental diesel electric locomotives using Lemp s control design the first known to be built in the United States 20 Following this development the 1923 Kaufman Act banned steam locomotives from New York City because of severe pollution problems The response to this law was to electrify high traffic rail lines However electrification was uneconomical to apply to lower traffic areas The first regular use of diesel electric locomotives was in switching shunter applications which were more forgiving than mainline applications of the limitations of contemporary diesel technology and where the idling economy of diesel relative to steam would be most beneficial GE entered a collaboration with the American Locomotive Company ALCO and Ingersoll Rand the AGEIR consortium in 1924 to produce a prototype 300 hp 220 kW boxcab locomotive delivered in July 1925 This locomotive demonstrated that the diesel electric power unit could provide many of the benefits of an electric locomotive without the railroad having to bear the sizeable expense of electrification 21 The unit successfully demonstrated in switching and local freight and passenger service on ten railroads and three industrial lines 22 Westinghouse Electric and Baldwin collaborated to build switching locomotives starting in 1929 However the Great Depression curtailed demand for Westinghouse s electrical equipment and they stopped building locomotives internally opting to supply electrical parts instead 23 In June 1925 Baldwin Locomotive Works outshopped a prototype diesel electric locomotive for special uses such as for runs where water for steam locomotives was scarce using electrical equipment from Westinghouse Electric Company 24 Its twin engine design was not successful and the unit was scrapped after a short testing and demonstration period 25 Industry sources were beginning to suggest the outstanding advantages of this new form of motive power 26 In 1929 the Canadian National Railways became the first North American railway to use diesels in mainline service with two units 9000 and 9001 from Westinghouse 27 However these early diesels proved expensive and unreliable with their high cost of acquisition relative to steam unable to be realized in operating cost savings as they were frequently out of service It would be another five years before diesel electric propulsion would be successfully used in mainline service and nearly ten years before fully replacing steam became a real prospect with existing diesel technology Before diesel power could make inroads into mainline service the limitations of diesel engines circa 1930 low power to weight ratios and narrow output range had to be overcome A major effort to overcome those limitations was launched by General Motors after they moved into the diesel field with their acquisition of the Winton Engine Company a major manufacturer of diesel engines for marine and stationary applications in 1930 Supported by the General Motors Research Division GM s Winton Engine Corporation sought to develop diesel engines suitable for high speed mobile use The first milestone in that effort was delivery in early 1934 of the Winton 201A a two stroke mechanically aspirated uniflow scavenged unit injected diesel engine that could deliver the required performance for a fast lightweight passenger train The second milestone and the one that got American railroads moving towards diesel was the 1938 delivery of GM s Model 567 engine that was designed specifically for locomotive use bringing a fivefold increase in life of some mechanical parts and showing its potential for meeting the rigors of freight service 28 Diesel electric railroad locomotion entered mainline service when the Burlington Railroad and Union Pacific used custom built diesel streamliners to haul passengers starting in late 1934 17 29 Burlington s Zephyr trainsets evolved from articulated three car sets with 600 hp power cars in 1934 and early 1935 to the Denver Zephyr semi articulated ten car trainsets pulled by cab booster power sets introduced in late 1936 Union Pacific started diesel streamliner service between Chicago and Portland Oregon in June 1935 and in the following year would add Los Angeles CA Oakland CA and Denver CO to the destinations of diesel streamliners out of Chicago The Burlington and Union Pacific streamliners were built by the Budd Company and the Pullman Standard Company respectively using the new Winton engines and power train systems designed by GM s Electro Motive Corporation EMC s experimental 1800 hp B B locomotives of 1935 demonstrated the multiple unit control systems used for the cab booster sets and the twin engine format used with the later Zephyr power units Both of those features would be used in EMC s later production model locomotives The lightweight diesel streamliners of the mid 1930s demonstrated the advantages of diesel for passenger service with breakthrough schedule times but diesel locomotive power would not fully come of age until regular series production of mainline diesel locomotives commenced and it was shown suitable for full size passenger and freight service First American series production locomotives Edit Following their 1925 prototype the AGEIR consortium produced 25 more units of 300 hp 220 kW 60 ton AGEIR boxcab switching locomotives between 1925 and 1928 for several New York City railroads making them the first series produced diesel locomotives 30 The consortium also produced seven twin engine 100 ton boxcabs and one hybrid trolley battery unit with a diesel driven charging circuit ALCO acquired the McIntosh amp Seymour Engine Company in 1929 and entered series production of 300 hp 220 kW and 600 hp 450 kW single cab switcher units in 1931 ALCO would be the pre eminent builder of switch engines through the mid 1930s and would adapt the basic switcher design to produce versatile and highly successful albeit relatively low powered road locomotives GM seeing the success of the custom streamliners sought to expand the market for diesel power by producing standardized locomotives under their Electro Motive Corporation In 1936 EMC s new factory started production of switch engines In 1937 the factory started producing their new E series streamlined passenger locomotives which would be upgraded with more reliable purpose built engines in 1938 Seeing the performance and reliability of the new 567 model engine in passenger locomotives EMC was eager to demonstrate diesel s viability in freight service Following the successful 1939 tour of EMC s FT demonstrator freight locomotive set the stage was set for dieselization of American railroads In 1941 ALCO GE introduced the RS 1 road switcher that occupied its own market niche while EMD s F series locomotives were sought for mainline freight service The US entry into World War II slowed conversion to diesel the War Production Board put a halt to building new passenger equipment and gave naval uses priority for diesel engine production During the petroleum crisis of 1942 43 coal fired steam had the advantage of not using fuel that was in critically short supply EMD was later allowed to increase the production of its FT locomotives and ALCO GE was allowed to produce a limited number of DL 109 road locomotives but most in the locomotive business were restricted to making switch engines and steam locomotives In the early postwar era EMD dominated the market for mainline locomotives with their E and F series locomotives ALCO GE in the late 1940s produced switchers and road switchers that were successful in the short haul market However EMD launched their GP series road switcher locomotives in 1949 which displaced all other locomotives in the freight market including their own F series locomotives GE subsequently dissolved its partnership with ALCO and would emerge as EMD s main competitor in the early 1960s eventually taking the top position in the locomotive market from EMD Early diesel electric locomotives in the United States used direct current DC traction motors but alternating current AC motors came into widespread use in the 1990s starting with the Electro Motive SD70MAC in 1993 and followed by General Electric s AC4400CW in 1994 and AC6000CW in 1995 31 Early diesel locomotives and railcars in Europe Edit First functional diesel vehicles Edit Swiss and German co production world s first functional diesel electric railcar 1914 In 1914 the world s first functional diesel electric railcars were produced for the Koniglich Sachsische Staatseisenbahnen Royal Saxon State Railways by Waggonfabrik Rastatt with electric equipment from Brown Boveri amp Cie and diesel engines from Swiss Sulzer AG They were classified as DET 1 and DET 2 de wiki de Because of a shortage of petrol products during World War I they remained unused for regular service in Germany In 1922 they were sold to Swiss Compagnie du Chemin de fer Regional du Val de Travers fr wiki fr where they were used in regular service up to the electrification of the line in 1944 Afterwards the company kept them in service as boosters until 1965 Fiat claims to have built the first Italian diesel electric locomotive in 1922 but little detail is available Several Fiat TIBB Bo Bo diesel locomotives were built for service on the 950 mm 3 ft 1 3 8 in narrow gauge Ferrovie Calabro Lucane and the Societa per le Strade Ferrate del Mediterrano in southern Italy in 1926 following trials in 1924 25 32 The six cylinder two stroke motor produced 440 horsepower 330 kW at 500 rpm driving four DC motors one for each axle These 44 tonnes 43 long tons 49 short tons locomotives with 45 km h 28 mph top speed proved quite successful 33 In 1924 two diesel electric locomotives were taken in service by the Soviet railways almost at the same time World s first useful diesel locomotive for long distances SZD Eel2 The engine Eel2 Eel2 original number Yue 001 Yu e 001 started on October 22 It had been designed by a team led by Yuri Lomonosov and built 1923 1924 by Maschinenfabrik Esslingen in Germany It had five driving axles 1 E1 After several test rides it hauled trains for almost three decades from 1925 to 1954 34 Though proved to be world s first functional diesel locomotive it did not become a series but it became a model for several classes of Soviet diesel locomotives The engine Shel1 Shch el 1 original number Yue2 Yu e 2 started on November 9 It had been developed by Yakov Modestovich Gakkel ru wiki ru and built by Baltic Shipyard in Saint Petersburg It had ten driving axles in three bogies 1 Co Do Co 1 From 1925 to 1927 it hauled trains between Moscow and Kursk and in Caucasus region Due to technical problems afterwards it was out of service Since 1934 it was used as a stationary electric generator In 1935 Krauss Maffei MAN and Voith built the first diesel hydraulic locomotive called V 140 in Germany Diesel hydraulics became the mainstream in diesel locomotives in Germany since the German railways DRG were pleased with the performance of that engine Serial production of diesel locomotives in Germany began after World War II Switchers Edit Shunter of Nederlandse Spoorwegen from 1934 in modern livery In many railway stations and industrial compounds steam shunters had to be kept hot during many breaks between scattered short tasks Therefore diesel traction became economical for shunting before it became economical for hauling trains The construction of diesel shunters began in 1920 in France in 1925 in Denmark in 1926 in the Netherlands and in 1927 in Germany After a few years of testing hundreds of units were produced within a decade Diesel railcars for regional traffic Edit Renault VH France 1933 34 Diesel powered or oil engined railcars generally diesel mechanical were developed by various European manufacturers in the 1930s e g by William Beardmore and Company for the Canadian National Railways the Beardmore Tornado engine was subsequently used in the R101 airship Some of those series for regional traffic were begun with gasoline motors and then continued with diesel motors such as Hungarian BCmot The class code doesn t tell anything but railmotor with 2nd and 3rd class seats 128 cars built 1926 1937 or German Wismar railbuses 57 cars 1932 1941 In France the first diesel railcar was Renault VH 115 units produced 1933 34 In Italy after six Gasoline cars since 1931 Fiat and Breda built a lot of diesel railmotors more than 110 from 1933 to 1938 and 390 from 1940 to 1953 Class 772 known as Littorina and Class ALn 900 High speed railcars Edit In the 1930s streamlined highspeed diesel railcars were developed in several countries In Germany the Flying Hamburger was built in 1932 After a test ride in December 1932 this two coach diesel railcar in English terminology a DMU2 started service at Deutsche Reichsbahn DRG in February 1933 It became the prototype of DRG Class SVT 137 with 33 more highspeed DMUs built for DRG till 1938 13 DMU 2 Hamburg series 18 DMU 3 Leipzig and Koln series and two DMU 4 Berlin series French SNCF classes XF 1000 and XF 1100 comprised 11 high speed DMUs also called TAR built 1934 1939 In Hungary Ganz Works built the Arpad railmotor hu de a kind of a luxurious railbus in a series of seven items since 1934 and started to build the Hargita hu in 1944 Further developments Edit British Rail Class D16 1 since 1948In 1945 a batch of 30 Baldwin diesel electric locomotives Baldwin 0 6 6 0 1000 was delivered from the United States to the railways of the Soviet Union In 1947 the London Midland and Scottish Railway LMS introduced the first of a pair of 1 600 hp 1 200 kW Co Co diesel electric locomotives later British Rail Class D16 1 for regular use in the United Kingdom although British manufacturers such as Armstrong Whitworth had been exporting diesel locomotives since 1930 Fleet deliveries to British Railways of other designs such as Class 20 and Class 31 began in 1957 Series production of diesel locomotives in Italy began in the mid 1950s Generally diesel traction in Italy was of less importance than in other countries as it was amongst the most advanced countries in the electrification of the main lines and as Italian geography makes freight transport by sea cheaper than rail transportation even on many domestic connections Early diesel locomotives and railcars in Asia Edit Japan Edit In Japan starting in the 1920s some petrol electric railcars were produced The first diesel electric traction and the first air streamed vehicles on Japanese rails were the two DMU3s of class Kiha 43000 キハ43000系 35 Japan s first series of diesel locomotives was class DD50 国鉄DD50形 twin locomotives developed since 1950 and in service since 1953 36 China Edit See also List of locomotives in China Diesel locomotives One of the first domestically developed Diesel vehicles of China was the DMU Dongfeng 东风 produced in 1958 by CSR Sifang Series production of China s first Diesel locomotive class the DFH 1 began in 1964 following the construction of a prototype in 1959 India Edit See also List of diesel locomotives of India Early diesel locomotives and railcars in Australia Edit A Mckeen railcar in Wodonga Australia 1911 The Trans Australian Railway built 1912 to 1917 by Commonwealth Railways CR passes through 2 000 km of waterless or salt watered desert terrain unsuitable for steam locomotives The original engineer Henry Deane envisaged diesel operation to overcome such problems 37 Some have suggested that the CR worked with the South Australian Railways to trial diesel traction 38 However the technology was not developed enough to be reliable As in Europe the usage of internal combustion engines advanced more readily in self propelled railcars than in locomotives Some Australian railway companies bought McKeen railmotors In the 1920s and 1930s more reliable Gasoline railmotors were built by Australian industries Australia s first diesel railcars were the NSWGR 100 Class PH later DP Silver City Comet cars in 1937 39 High speed vehicles for those days possibilities on 3 ft 6 in 1 067 mm were the ten Vulcan railcars of 1940 for New Zealand Transmission types EditUnlike steam engines internal combustion engines require a transmission to power the wheels The engine must be allowed to continue to run when the locomotive is stopped Diesel mechanical Edit Schematic illustration of a diesel mechanical locomotive A diesel mechanical locomotive uses a mechanical transmission in a fashion similar to that employed in most road vehicles This type of transmission is generally limited to low powered low speed shunting switching locomotives lightweight multiple units and self propelled railcars A British Rail Class 03 diesel mechanical shunter with a jackshaft under the cab The mechanical transmissions used for railroad propulsion are generally more complex and much more robust than standard road versions There is usually a fluid coupling interposed between the engine and gearbox and the gearbox is often of the epicyclic planetary type to permit shifting while under load Various systems have been devised to minimise the break in transmission during gear changing e g the S S S synchro self shifting gearbox used by Hudswell Clarke Diesel mechanical propulsion is limited by the difficulty of building a reasonably sized transmission capable of coping with the power and torque required to move a heavy train A number of attempts to use diesel mechanical propulsion in high power applications have been made e g the 1 500 kW 2 000 hp British Rail 10100 locomotive although none have proved successful in the end Diesel electric Edit See also Diesel electric transmission This section is about diesel locomotives using electric transmissions For locomotives powered by both external electricity and diesel fuel see Electro diesel For locomotives powered by a combination of diesel or fuel cells and batteries or ultracapacitors see Hybrid train This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Schematic diagram of a diesel electric locomotive In a diesel electric locomotive the diesel engine drives either an electrical DC generator generally less than 3 000 hp 2 200 kW net for traction or an electrical AC alternator rectifier generally 3 000 hp net or more for traction the output of which provides power to the traction motors that drive the locomotive There is no mechanical connection between the diesel engine and the wheels The important components of diesel electric propulsion are the diesel engine also known as the prime mover the main generator alternator rectifier traction motors usually with four or six axles and a control system consisting of the engine governor and electrical or electronic components including switchgear rectifiers and other components which control or modify the electrical supply to the traction motors In the most elementary case the generator may be directly connected to the motors with only very simple switchgear The EMD F40PH left and MPI MPXpress series MP36PH 3S right locomotives coupled together by Metra use diesel electric transmission Soviet 2TE10M locomotive Czech Class 742 and 743 locomotive Originally the traction motors and generator were DC machines Following the development of high capacity silicon rectifiers in the 1960s the DC generator was replaced by an alternator using a diode bridge to convert its output to DC This advance greatly improved locomotive reliability and decreased generator maintenance costs by elimination of the commutator and brushes in the generator Elimination of the brushes and commutator in turn eliminated the possibility of a particularly destructive type of event referred to as a flashover also known as an arc fault which could result in immediate generator failure and in some cases start an engine room fire Current North American practice is for four axles for high speed passenger or time freight or for six axles for lower speed or manifest freight The most modern units on time freight service tend to have six axles underneath the frame Unlike those in manifest service time freight units will have only four of the axles connected to traction motors with the other two as idler axles for weight distribution In the late 1980s the development of high power variable voltage variable frequency VVVF drives or traction inverters allowed the use of polyphase AC traction motors thereby also eliminating the motor commutator and brushes The result is a more efficient and reliable drive that requires relatively little maintenance and is better able to cope with overload conditions that often destroyed the older types of motors Engineer s controls in a diesel electric locomotive cab The lever near bottom centre is the throttle and the lever visible at bottom left is the automatic brake valve control Diesel electric control Edit MLW model S 3 produced in 1957 for the CPR adhering to designs by ALCO A diesel electric locomotive s power output is independent of road speed as long as the unit s generator current and voltage limits are not exceeded Therefore the unit s ability to develop tractive effort also referred to as drawbar pull or tractive force which is what actually propels the train will tend to inversely vary with speed within these limits See power curve below Maintaining acceptable operating parameters was one of the principal design considerations that had to be solved in early diesel electric locomotive development and ultimately led to the complex control systems in place on modern units Throttle operation Edit Cab of the Russian locomotive 2TE116U 11 indicates the throttle The prime mover s power output is primarily determined by its rotational speed RPM and fuel rate which are regulated by a governor or similar mechanism The governor is designed to react to both the throttle setting as determined by the engine driver and the speed at which the prime mover is running see Control theory Locomotive power output and therefore speed is typically controlled by the engine driver using a stepped or notched throttle that produces binary like electrical signals corresponding to throttle position This basic design lends itself well to multiple unit MU operation by producing discrete conditions that assure that all units in a consist respond in the same way to throttle position Binary encoding also helps to minimize the number of trainlines electrical connections that are required to pass signals from unit to unit For example only four trainlines are required to encode all possible throttle positions if there are up to 14 stages of throttling North American locomotives such as those built by EMD or General Electric have eight throttle positions or notches as well as a reverser to allow them to operate bi directionally Many UK built locomotives have a ten position throttle The power positions are often referred to by locomotive crews depending upon the throttle setting such as run 3 or notch 3 In older locomotives the throttle mechanism was ratcheted so that it was not possible to advance more than one power position at a time The engine driver could not for example pull the throttle from notch 2 to notch 4 without stopping at notch 3 This feature was intended to prevent rough train handling due to abrupt power increases caused by rapid throttle motion throttle stripping an operating rules violation on many railroads Modern locomotives no longer have this restriction as their control systems are able to smoothly modulate power and avoid sudden changes in train loading regardless of how the engine driver operates the controls When the throttle is in the idle position the prime mover receives minimal fuel causing it to idle at low RPM In addition the traction motors are not connected to the main generator and the generator s field windings are not excited energized the generator does not produce electricity without excitation Therefore the locomotive will be in neutral Conceptually this is the same as placing an automobile s transmission into neutral while the engine is running To set the locomotive in motion the reverser control handle is placed into the correct position forward or reverse the brake is released and the throttle is moved to the run 1 position the first power notch An experienced engine driver can accomplish these steps in a coordinated fashion that will result in a nearly imperceptible start The positioning of the reverser and movement of the throttle together is conceptually like shifting an automobile s automatic transmission into gear while the engine is idling Placing the throttle into the first power position will cause the traction motors to be connected to the main generator and the latter s field coils to be excited With excitation applied the main generator will deliver electricity to the traction motors resulting in motion If the locomotive is running light that is not coupled to the rest of a train and is not on an ascending grade it will easily accelerate On the other hand if a long train is being started the locomotive may stall as soon as some of the slack has been taken up as the drag imposed by the train will exceed the tractive force being developed An experienced engine driver will be able to recognize an incipient stall and will gradually advance the throttle as required to maintain the pace of acceleration As the throttle is moved to higher power notches the fuel rate to the prime mover will increase resulting in a corresponding increase in RPM and horsepower output At the same time main generator field excitation will be proportionally increased to absorb the higher power This will translate into increased electrical output to the traction motors with a corresponding increase in tractive force Eventually depending on the requirements of the train s schedule the engine driver will have moved the throttle to the position of maximum power and will maintain it there until the train has accelerated to the desired speed The propulsion system is designed to produce maximum traction motor torque at start up which explains why modern locomotives are capable of starting trains weighing in excess of 15 000 tons even on ascending grades Current technology allows a locomotive to develop as much as 30 of its loaded driver weight in tractive force amounting to 120 000 pounds force 530 kN of tractive force for a large six axle freight goods unit In fact a consist of such units can produce more than enough drawbar pull at start up to damage or derail cars if on a curve or break couplers the latter being referred to in North American railroad slang as jerking a lung Therefore it is incumbent upon the engine driver to carefully monitor the amount of power being applied at start up to avoid damage In particular jerking a lung could be a calamitous matter if it were to occur on an ascending grade except that the safety inherent in the correct operation of fail safe automatic train brakes installed in wagons today prevents runaway trains by automatically applying the wagon brakes when train line air pressure drops Propulsion system operation Edit Typical main generator constant power curve at notch 8 Left corridor of power compartment of Russian locomotive 2TE116U 3 alternator 4 rectifier 6 diesel A locomotive s control system is designed so that the main generator electrical power output is matched to any given engine speed Given the innate characteristics of traction motors as well as the way in which the motors are connected to the main generator the generator will produce high current and low voltage at low locomotive speeds gradually changing to low current and high voltage as the locomotive accelerates Therefore the net power produced by the locomotive will remain constant for any given throttle setting see power curve graph for notch 8 In older designs the prime mover s governor and a companion device the load regulator play a central role in the control system The governor has two external inputs requested engine speed determined by the engine driver s throttle setting and actual engine speed feedback The governor has two external control outputs fuel injector setting which determines the engine fuel rate and current regulator position which affects main generator excitation The governor also incorporates a separate overspeed protective mechanism that will immediately cut off the fuel supply to the injectors and sound an alarm in the cab in the event the prime mover exceeds a defined RPM Not all of these inputs and outputs are necessarily electrical Russian diesel locomotive TEP80 An EMD 12 567B 12 cylinder 2 stroke diesel engine foreground square hand holes stored pending rebuild and missing some components with a 16 567C or D 16 cylinder engine background round hand holes As the load on the engine changes its rotational speed will also change This is detected by the governor through a change in the engine speed feedback signal The net effect is to adjust both the fuel rate and the load regulator position so that engine RPM and torque and therefore power output will remain constant for any given throttle setting regardless of actual road speed In newer designs controlled by a traction computer each engine speed step is allotted an appropriate power output or kW reference in software The computer compares this value with actual main generator power output or kW feedback calculated from traction motor current and main generator voltage feedback values The computer adjusts the feedback value to match the reference value by controlling the excitation of the main generator as described above The governor still has control of engine speed but the load regulator no longer plays a central role in this type of control system However the load regulator is retained as a back up in case of engine overload Modern locomotives fitted with electronic fuel injection EFI may have no mechanical governor however a virtual load regulator and governor are retained with computer modules Traction motor performance is controlled either by varying the DC voltage output of the main generator for DC motors or by varying the frequency and voltage output of the VVVF for AC motors With DC motors various connection combinations are utilized to adapt the drive to varying operating conditions At standstill main generator output is initially low voltage high current often in excess of 1000 amperes per motor at full power When the locomotive is at or near standstill current flow will be limited only by the DC resistance of the motor windings and interconnecting circuitry as well as the capacity of the main generator itself Torque in a series wound motor is approximately proportional to the square of the current Hence the traction motors will produce their highest torque causing the locomotive to develop maximum tractive effort enabling it to overcome the inertia of the train This effect is analogous to what happens in an automobile automatic transmission at start up where it is in first gear and thereby producing maximum torque multiplication As the locomotive accelerates the now rotating motor armatures will start to generate a counter electromotive force back EMF meaning the motors are also trying to act as generators which will oppose the output of the main generator and cause traction motor current to decrease Main generator voltage will correspondingly increase in an attempt to maintain motor power but will eventually reach a plateau At this point the locomotive will essentially cease to accelerate unless on a downgrade Since this plateau will usually be reached at a speed substantially less than the maximum that may be desired something must be done to change the drive characteristics to allow continued acceleration This change is referred to as transition a process that is analogous to shifting gears in an automobile Transition methods include Series Parallel or motor transition Initially pairs of motors are connected in series across the main generator At higher speed motors are reconnected in parallel across the main generator Field shunting field diverting or weak fielding Resistance is connected in parallel with the motor field This has the effect of increasing the armature current producing a corresponding increase in motor torque and speed Both methods may also be combined to increase the operating speed range Generator rectifier transition Reconnecting the two separate internal main generator stator windings of two rectifiers from parallel to series to increase the output voltage In older locomotives it was necessary for the engine driver to manually execute transition by use of a separate control As an aid to performing transition at the right time the load meter an indicator that shows the engine driver how much current is being drawn by the traction motors was calibrated to indicate at which points forward or backward transition should take place Automatic transition was subsequently developed to produce better operating efficiency and to protect the main generator and traction motors from overloading from improper transition Modern locomotives incorporate traction inverters AC to DC capable of delivering 1 200 volts earlier traction generators DC to DC were capable of delivering only 600 volts This improvement was accomplished largely through improvements in silicon diode technology With the capability of delivering 1 200 volts to the traction motors the need for transition was eliminated Dynamic braking Edit Main article Dynamic brake A common option on diesel electric locomotives is dynamic rheostatic braking Dynamic braking takes advantage of the fact that the traction motor armatures are always rotating when the locomotive is in motion and that a motor can be made to act as a generator by separately exciting the field winding When dynamic braking is utilized the traction control circuits are configured as follows The field winding of each traction motor is connected across the main generator The armature of each traction motor is connected across a forced air cooled resistance grid the dynamic braking grid in the roof of the locomotive s hood The prime mover RPM is increased and the main generator field is excited causing a corresponding excitation of the traction motor fields The aggregate effect of the above is to cause each traction motor to generate electric power and dissipate it as heat in the dynamic braking grid A fan connected across the grid provides forced air cooling Consequently the fan is powered by the output of the traction motors and will tend to run faster and produce more airflow as more energy is applied to the grid Ultimately the source of the energy dissipated in the dynamic braking grid is the motion of the locomotive as imparted to the traction motor armatures Therefore the traction motors impose drag and the locomotive acts as a brake As speed decreases the braking effect decays and usually becomes ineffective below approximately 16 km h 10 mph depending on the gear ratio between the traction motors and axles Dynamic braking is particularly beneficial when operating in mountainous regions where there is always the danger of a runaway due to overheated friction brakes during descent In such cases dynamic brakes are usually applied in conjunction with the air brakes the combined effect being referred to as blended braking The use of blended braking can also assist in keeping the slack in a long train stretched as it crests a grade helping to prevent a run in an abrupt bunching of train slack that can cause a derailment Blended braking is also commonly used with commuter trains to reduce wear and tear on the mechanical brakes that is a natural result of the numerous stops such trains typically make during a run Electro diesel Edit Metro North s GE Genesis P32AC DM electro diesel locomotive can also operate off of third rail electrification Main article Electro diesel locomotive These special locomotives can operate as an electric locomotive or as a diesel locomotive The Long Island Rail Road Metro North Railroad and New Jersey Transit Rail Operations operate dual mode diesel electric third rail catenary on NJTransit locomotives between non electrified territory and New York City because of a local law banning diesel powered locomotives in Manhattan tunnels For the same reason Amtrak operates a fleet of dual mode locomotives in the New York area British Rail operated dual diesel electric electric locomotives designed to run primarily as electric locomotives with reduced power available when running on diesel power This allowed railway yards to remain unelectrified as the third rail power system is extremely hazardous in a yard area Diesel hydraulic Edit JNR DD51 1 diesel hydraulic Diesel hydraulic locomotives use one or more torque converters in combination with fixed ratio gears Drive shafts and gears form the final drive to convey the power from the torque converters to the wheels and to effect reverse The difference between hydraulic and mechanical systems is where the speed and torque is adjusted In the mechanical transmission system that has multiple ratios such as in a gear box if there is a hydraulic section it is only to allow the engine to run when the train is too slow or stopped In the hydraulic system hydraulics are the primary system for adapting engine speed and torque to the train s situation with gear selection for only limited use such as reverse gear Hydrostatic transmission Edit Hydraulic drive systems using a hydrostatic hydraulic drive system have been applied to rail use Modern examples included 350 to 750 hp 260 to 560 kW shunting locomotives by Cockerill Belgium 40 4 to 12 tonne 35 to 58 kW 47 to 78 hp narrow gauge industrial locomotives by Atlas Copco subsidiary GIA 41 Hydrostatic drives are also utilised in railway maintenance machines tampers rail grinders 42 Application of hydrostatic transmissions is generally limited to small shunting locomotives and rail maintenance equipment as well as being used for non tractive applications in diesel engines such as drives for traction motor fans citation needed Hydrokinetic transmission Edit See also Torque converter and Fluid coupling DB class V 200 diesel hydraulic A Henschel Germany diesel hydraulic locomotive in Medan North Sumatra Hydrokinetic transmission also called hydrodynamic transmission uses a torque converter A torque converter consists of three main parts two of which rotate and one the stator that has a lock preventing backwards rotation and adding output torque by redirecting the oil flow at low output RPM All three main parts are sealed in an oil filled housing To match engine speed to load speed over the entire speed range of a locomotive some additional method is required to give sufficient range One method is to follow the torque converter with a mechanical gearbox which switches ratios automatically similar to an automatic transmission in an automobile Another method is to provide several torque converters each with a range of variability covering part of the total required all the torque converters are mechanically connected all the time and the appropriate one for the speed range required is selected by filling it with oil and draining the others The filling and draining is carried out with the transmission under load and results in very smooth range changes with no break in the transmitted power Locomotives Edit British Rail diesel hydraulic locomotives Class 52 Western Class 42 Warship and Class 35 Hymek Diesel hydraulic locomotives are less efficient than diesel electrics The first generation BR diesel hydraulics were significantly less efficient c 65 than diesel electrics c 80 citation needed Moreover initial versions were found in many countries to be mechanically more complicated and more likely to break down citation needed Hydraulic transmission for locomotives was developed in Germany citation needed There is still debate over the relative merits of hydraulic vs electrical transmission systems advantages claimed for hydraulic systems include lower weight high reliability and lower capital cost citation needed By the 21st century for diesel locomotive traction worldwide the majority of countries used diesel electric designs with diesel hydraulic designs not found in use outside Germany and Japan and some neighbouring states where it is used in designs for freight work In Germany and Finland diesel hydraulic systems have achieved high reliability in operation citation needed In the UK the diesel hydraulic principle gained a poor reputation due to the poor durability and reliability of the Maybach Mekydro hydraulic transmission citation needed Argument continues over the relative reliability of hydraulic systems with questions over whether data has been manipulated to favour local suppliers over non German ones citation needed Multiple units Edit Diesel hydraulic drive is common in multiple units with various transmission designs used including Voith torque converters and fluid couplings in combination with mechanical gearing The majority of British Rail s second generation passenger DMU stock used hydraulic transmission In the 21st century designs using hydraulic transmission include Bombardier s Turbostar Talent RegioSwinger families diesel engined versions of the Siemens Desiro platform and the Stadler Regio Shuttle Examples Edit A VR Class Dv12 diesel hydraulic locomotive A GMD GMDH 1 diesel hydraulic locomotive Diesel hydraulic locomotives have a smaller market share than those with diesel electric transmission the main worldwide user of main line hydraulic transmissions was the Federal Republic of Germany with designs including the 1950s DB class V 200 and the 1960 and 1970s DB Class V 160 family British Rail introduced a number of diesel hydraulic designs during its 1955 Modernisation Plan initially license built versions of German designs see Category Diesel hydraulic locomotives of Great Britain In Spain Renfe used high power to weight ratio twin engine German designs to haul high speed trains from the 1960s to 1990s See Renfe Classes 340 350 352 353 354 Other main line locomotives of the post war period included the 1950s GMD GMDH 1 experimental locomotives the Henschel amp Son built South African Class 61 000 in the 1960s Southern Pacific bought 18 Krauss Maffei KM ML 4000 diesel hydraulic locomotives The Denver amp Rio Grande Western Railroad also bought three all of which were later sold to SP 43 In Finland over 200 Finnish built VR class Dv12 and Dr14 diesel hydraulics with Voith transmissions have been continuously used since the early 1960s All units of Dr14 class and most units of Dv12 class are still in service VR has abandoned some weak conditioned units of 2700 series Dv12s 44 In the 21st century series production standard gauge diesel hydraulic designs include the Voith Gravita ordered by Deutsche Bahn and the Vossloh G2000 BB G1206 and G1700 designs all manufactured in Germany for freight use Diesel steam Edit Soviet Locomotive TP1 Main article Steam diesel hybrid locomotive Steam diesel hybrid locomotives can use steam generated from a boiler or diesel to power a piston engine The Cristiani Compressed Steam System used a diesel engine to power a compressor to drive and recirculate steam produced by a boiler effectively using steam as the power transmission medium with the diesel engine being the prime mover 45 Diesel pneumatic Edit The diesel pneumatic locomotive was of interest in the 1930s because it offered the possibility of converting existing steam locomotives to diesel operation The frame and cylinders of the steam locomotive would be retained and the boiler would be replaced by a diesel engine driving an air compressor The problem was low thermal efficiency because of the large amount of energy wasted as heat in the air compressor Attempts were made to compensate for this by using the diesel exhaust to re heat the compressed air but these had limited success A German proposal of 1929 did result in a prototype 46 but a similar British proposal of 1932 to use an LNER Class R1 locomotive never got beyond the design stage Multiple unit operation Edit Diesel electric locomotive built by EMD for service in the UK and continental Europe Most diesel locomotives are capable of multiple unit operation MU as a means of increasing horsepower and tractive effort when hauling heavy trains All North American locomotives including export models use a standardized AAR electrical control system interconnected by a 27 pin MU cable between the units For UK built locomotives a number of incompatible control systems are used but the most common is the Blue Star system which is electro pneumatic and fitted to most early diesel classes A small number of types typically higher powered locomotives intended for passenger only work do not have multiple control systems In all cases the electrical control connections made common to all units in a consist are referred to as trainlines The result is that all locomotives in a consist behave as one in response to the engine driver s control movements The ability to couple diesel electric locomotives in an MU fashion was first introduced in the EMC EA EB of 1937 Electrical interconnections were made so one engine driver could operate the entire consist from the head end unit In mountainous regions it is common to interpose helper locomotives in the middle of the train both to provide the extra power needed to ascend a grade and to limit the amount of stress applied to the draft gear of the car coupled to the head end power The helper units in such distributed power configurations are controlled from the lead unit s cab through coded radio signals Although this is technically not an MU configuration the behaviour is the same as with physically interconnected units Cab arrangements Edit Cab arrangements vary by builder and operator Practice in the U S has traditionally been for a cab at one end of the locomotive with limited visibility if the locomotive is not operated cab forward This is not usually a problem as U S locomotives are usually operated in pairs or threes and arranged so that a cab is at each end of each set European practice is usually for a cab at each end of the locomotive as trains are usually light enough to operate with one locomotive Early U S practice was to add power units without cabs booster or B units and the arrangement was often A B A A A B A A B B or A B B A where A was a unit with a cab Center cabs were sometimes used for switch locomotives Cow calf Edit Main article Cow calf In North American railroading a cow calf set is a pair of switcher type locomotives one the cow equipped with a driving cab the other the calf without a cab and controlled from the cow through cables Cow calf sets are used in heavy switching and hump yard service Some are radio controlled without an operating engineer present in the cab This arrangement is also known as master slave Where two connected units were present EMD called these TR 2s approximately 2 000 hp or 1 500 kW where three units TR 3s approximately 3 000 hp or 2 200 kW Cow calves have largely disappeared as these engine combinations exceeded their economic lifetimes many years ago Present North American practice is to pair two 3 000 hp GP40 2 or SD40 2 road switchers often nearly worn out and very soon ready for rebuilding or scrapping and to utilize these for so called transfer uses for which the TR 2 TR 3 and TR 4 engines were originally intended hence the designation TR for transfer Occasionally the second unit may have its prime mover and traction alternator removed and replaced by concrete or steel ballast and the power for traction obtained from the master unit As a 16 cylinder prime mover generally weighs in the 36 000 pound 16 000 kg range and a 3 000 hp traction alternator generally weighs in the 18 000 pound 8 200 kg range this would mean that 54 000 lb 24 000 kg would be needed for ballast A pair of fully capable Dash 2 units would be rated 6 000 hp 4 500 kW A Dash 2 pair where only one had a prime mover alternator would be rated 3 000 hp with all power provided by master but the combination benefits from the tractive effort provided by the slave as engines in transfer service are seldom called upon to provide 3 000 hp much less 6 000 hp on a continuous basis Fittings and appliances EditFlameproofing Edit A standard diesel locomotive presents a very low fire risk but flame proofing can reduce the risk even further This involves fitting a water filled box to the exhaust pipe to quench any red hot carbon particles that may be emitted Other precautions may include a fully insulated electrical system neither side earthed to the frame and all electric wiring enclosed in conduit The flameproof diesel locomotive has replaced the fireless steam locomotive in areas of high fire risk such as oil refineries and ammunition dumps Preserved examples of flameproof diesel locomotives include Francis Baily of Thatcham ex RAF Welford at Southall Railway Centre Naworth ex National Coal Board at the South Tynedale Railway 47 Latest development of the Flameproof Diesel Vehicle Applied New Exhaust Gas Dry Type Treatment System does not need the water supply 48 Lights Edit A Canadian National Railway train showing the placement of the headlight and ditch lights on the locomotive The lights fitted to diesel locomotives vary from country to country North American locomotives are fitted with two headlights for safety in case one malfunctions and a pair of ditch lights The latter are fitted low down at the front and are designed to make the locomotive easily visible as it approaches a grade crossing Older locomotives may be fitted with a Gyralite or Mars Light instead of the ditch lights Environmental impact EditSee also Diesel exhaust Although diesel locomotives generally emit less sulphur dioxide a major pollutant to the environment and greenhouse gases than steam locomotives they are not completely clean in that respect 49 Furthermore like other diesel powered vehicles they emit nitrogen oxides and fine particles which are a risk to public health In fact in this last respect diesel locomotives may perform worse than steam locomotives For years it was thought by American government scientists who measure air pollution that diesel locomotive engines were relatively clean and emitted far less health threatening emissions than those of diesel trucks or other vehicles however the scientists discovered that because they used faulty estimates of the amount of fuel consumed by diesel locomotives they grossly understated the amount of pollution generated annually After revising their calculations they concluded that the annual emissions of nitrogen oxide a major ingredient in smog and acid rain and soot would be by 2030 nearly twice what they originally assumed 50 51 In Europe where most major railways have been electrified there is less concern This would mean that in the USA diesel locomotives would be releasing more than 800 000 tons of nitrogen oxide and 25 000 tons of soot every year within a quarter of a century in contrast to the EPA s previous projections of 480 000 tons of nitrogen dioxide and 12 000 tons of soot Since this was discovered to reduce the effects of the diesel locomotive on humans who are breathing the noxious emissions and on plants and animals it is considered practical to install traps in the diesel engines to reduce pollution levels 52 and other methods of pollution control e g use of biodiesel Diesel locomotive pollution has been of particular concern in the city of Chicago The Chicago Tribune reported levels of diesel soot inside locomotives leaving Chicago at levels hundreds of times above what is normally found on streets outside 53 Residents of several neighborhoods are most likely exposed to diesel emissions at levels several times higher than the national average for urban areas 54 Mitigation Edit In 2008 the United States Environmental Protection Agency EPA mandated regulations requiring all new or refurbished diesel locomotives to meet Tier II pollution standards that slash the amount of allowable soot by 90 and require an 80 reduction in nitrogen oxide emissions See List of low emissions locomotives Other technologies that are being deployed to reduce locomotive emissions and fuel consumption include Genset switching locomotives and hybrid Green Goat designs Genset locomotives use multiple smaller high speed diesel engines and generators generator sets rather than a single medium speed diesel engine and a single generator 55 Because of the cost of developing clean engines these smaller high speed engines are based on already developed truck engines Green Goats are a type of hybrid switching locomotive utilizing a small diesel engine and a large bank of rechargeable batteries 56 57 Switching locomotives are of particular concern as they typically operate in a limited area often in or near urban centers and spend much of their time idling Both designs reduce pollution below EPA Tier II standards and cut or eliminate emissions during idle Advantages over steam EditAs diesel locomotives advanced the cost of manufacturing and operating them dropped and they became cheaper to own and operate than steam locomotives In North America steam locomotives were custom made for specific railway routes so economies of scale were difficult to achieve 58 Though more complex to produce with exacting manufacturing tolerances 1 10000 inch or 0 0025 millimetre for diesel compared with 1 100 inch 0 25 mm for steam diesel locomotive parts were easier to mass produce Baldwin Locomotive Works offered almost 500 steam models in its heyday while EMD offered fewer than ten diesel varieties 59 In the United Kingdom British Railways built steam locomotives to standard designs from 1951 onwards These included standard interchangeable parts making them cheaper to produce than the diesel locomotives then available The capital cost per drawbar horse power was 13 6s steam 65 diesel 69 7s turbine and 17 13s electric 60 Diesel locomotives offer significant operating advantages over steam locomotives 61 They can safely be operated by one person making them ideal for switching shunting duties in yards although for safety reasons many main line diesel locomotives continue to have two person crews an engineer and a conductor switchman and the operating environment is much more attractive being quieter fully weatherproof and without the dirt and heat that is an inevitable part of operating a steam locomotive Diesel locomotives can be worked in multiple with a single crew controlling multiple locomotives in a single train something not practical with steam locomotives This brought greater efficiencies to the operator as individual locomotives could be relatively low powered for use as a single unit on light duties but marshaled together to provide the power needed on a heavy train With steam traction a single very powerful and expensive locomotive was required for the heaviest trains or the operator resorted to double heading with multiple locomotives and crews a method which was also expensive and brought with it its own operating difficulties Diesel engines can be started and stopped almost instantly meaning that a diesel locomotive has the potential to incur no fuel costs when not being used However it is still the practice of large North American railroads to use straight water as a coolant in diesel engines instead of coolants that incorporate anti freezing properties this results in diesel locomotives being left idling when parked in cold climates instead of being completely shut down A diesel engine can be left idling unattended for hours or even days especially since practically every diesel engine used in locomotives has systems that automatically shut the engine down if problems such as a loss of oil pressure or coolant loss occur Automatic start stop systems are available which monitor coolant and engine temperatures When the unit is close to having its coolant freeze the system restarts the diesel engine to warm the coolant and other systems 62 Steam locomotives require intensive maintenance lubrication and cleaning before during and after use Preparing and firing a steam locomotive for use from cold can take many hours They can be kept in readiness between uses with a low fire but this requires regular stoking and frequent attention to maintain the level of water in the boiler This may be necessary to prevent the water in the boiler freezing in cold climates so long as the water supply is not frozen After use a steam locomotive requires a lengthy disposal operation to perform cleaning inspection maintenance and refilling with water and fuel before it is ready for its next duty By contrast as early as 1939 EMD was promoting its FT Series locomotive as needing no maintenance between 30 day inspections beyond refuelling and basic fluid level and safety checks which could be performed with the prime mover still running Railways converting from steam to diesel operation in the 1940s and 1950s found that for a given period diesel locomotives were available for on average three or four times more revenue earning hours than equivalent steam locomotives allowing locomotive fleets to be cut drastically in size while maintaining operational capacity citation needed The maintenance and operational costs of steam locomotives were much higher than diesels Annual maintenance costs for steam locomotives accounted for 25 of the initial purchase price Spare parts were cast from wooden masters for specific locomotives The sheer number of unique steam locomotives meant that there was no feasible way for spare part inventories to be maintained 63 With diesel locomotives spare parts could be mass produced and held in stock ready for use and many parts and sub assemblies could be standardized across an operator s fleet using different models of locomotive from the same builder Modern diesel locomotive engines are designed to allow the power assemblies systems of working parts and their block interfaces to be replaced while keeping the main block in the locomotive which greatly reduces the time that a locomotive is out of revenue generating service when it requires maintenance 28 Steam engines required large quantities of coal and water which were expensive variable operating costs 64 Further the thermal efficiency of steam was considerably less than that of diesel engines Diesel s theoretical studies demonstrated potential thermal efficiencies for a compression ignition engine of 36 compared with 6 10 for steam and an 1897 one cylinder prototype operated at a remarkable 26 efficiency 65 However one study published in 1959 suggested that many of the comparisons between diesel and steam locomotives were made unfairly mostly because diesels were a newer technology After painstaking analysis of financial records and technological progress the author found that if research had continued on steam technology instead of diesel there would be negligible financial benefit in converting to diesel locomotion 66 By the mid 1960s diesel locomotives had effectively replaced steam locomotives where electric traction was not in use 64 Attempts to develop advanced steam technology continue in the 21st century but have not had a significant effect See also EditAlternative fuels for diesel engines Diesel multiple unit Diesel electric transmission Diesel engine Electric locomotive Electrification Electro diesel locomotive Gas turbine locomotive Heilmann locomotive Hybrid electric vehicle Hybrid locomotive Non road engineReferences Edit U S 608 845 Rudolf Diesel Internal combustion engine issued 9 August 1898 Arnold Heller Der Automobilmotor im Eisenbahnbetriebe Leipzig 1906 reprinted by Salzwasserverlag 2011 ISBN 978 3 86444 240 7 Roll Enzyklopadie des Eisenbahnwesens Elektrische Eisenbahnen there go to VII Automobile Triebwagen zu b Benzin Benzol oder Gasolin elektrischen Triebwagen Raymond S Zeitler American School Chicago Ill Self Contained Railway Motor Cars and Locomotives section SELF CONTAINED RAILWAY CARS 57 59 Roll Arader und Csanader Eisenbahnen Vereinigte Aktien Gesellschaft Museal railcars of BHEV and their history Diesel Electric Locomotives Diesel Electric Locomotives Union Pacific Retrieved 12 May 2022 Motive power for British Railways PDF The Engineer vol 202 p 254 24 April 1956 archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2014 retrieved 28 February 2014 The Electrical Review 22 474 4 May 1888 A small double cylinder engine has been mounted upon a truck which is worked on a temporary line of rails in order to show the adaptation of a petroleum engine for locomotive purposes on tramways a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a Missing or empty title help Diesel Railway Traction 17 25 1963 In one sense a dock authority was the earliest user of an oil engined locomotive for it was at the Hull docks of the North Eastern Railway that the Priestman locomotive put in its short period of service in 1894 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a Missing or empty title help Day John R Cooper Basil Knowlman 1960 railway Locomotives Frederick Muller p 42 The diesel has quite a long history and the first one ran as far back as 1894 This was a tiny 30 h p two axle standard gauge locomotive with a two cylinder engine designed by William Dent Priestman Webb Brian 1973 The British Internal Combustion Locomotive 1894 1940 David amp Charles ISBN 978 0715361153 Diesel Rudolf Christian Karl 1893 Theorie und Konstruktion eines rationellen Warmemotors zum Ersatz der Dampfmaschine und der heute bekannten Verbrennungsmotoren in German Berlin Springer pp 89 91 ISBN 978 3 642 64941 7 Churella 1998 p 15 Churella 1998 p 12 Glatte Wolfgang 1993 Deutsches Lok Archiv Diesellokomotiven 4 Auflage Berlin Transpress ISBN 978 3 344 70767 5 a b Stover John F 1997 American Railroads Chicago University of Chicago Press p 212 ISBN 978 0 226 77658 3 Edison Thomas A U S Patent No 493 425 filed January 19 1891 and issued March 14 1891 Accessed via the Edison Papers at US Patent 493 425 on February 8 2007 Lemp Hermann U S Patent No 1 154 785 filed April 8 1914 and issued September 28 1915 Accessed via Google Patent Search at US Patent 1 154 785 on February 8 2007 Pinkepank 1973 pp 139 141 Churella 1998 pp 25 27 Evolution of the American Diesel Locomotive J Parker Lamb 2007 Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 34863 0 p 29 Churella 1998 pp 28 30 Railroads To Try Diesel Locomotive Special to the New York Times p 1 February 18 1925 Pinkepank 1973 p 283 Churella 1998 p 27 Pinkepank 1973 p 409 a b Kettering E W 29 November 1951 History and Development of the 567 Series General Motors Locomotive Engine ASME 1951 Annual Meeting Atlantic City New Jersey Electro Motive Division General Motors Corporation Diesel Streamliners Now Link Coast to Coast Popular Mechanics August 1937 Pinkepank 1973 p 209 211 Solomon Brian Locomotive 2001 pp 120 130 vecchia loco ferrovie della Calabria Ferrovie it www ferrovie it Messerschmitt Wolfgang 1969 Geschichte der italienischen Elektro und Diesellokomotiven History of Italy s electric and Diesel locomotives in German Zurich Orell Fuesli Verlag pp 101 102 The first russian diesel locos izmerov narod ru DD50 5 DD50 2 随時アップ 消えた車輌写真館 鉄道ホビダス rail hobidas com キハ43000の資料 しるねこの微妙な生活 浮気心あれば水心 Burke A 1991 Rails through the Wilderness New South Wales University Press Holden R 2006 No 259 the curious story of a forgotten locomotive Railmac Publications Rail Motors and XPTs David Cooke ARHS NSW Division 1984 pp40 59 Shunting locomotives www cmigroupe com Retrieved 29 June 2019 Locomotives www gia se archived from the original on 2014 03 30 retrieved 1 February 2014 Solomon Brian 2001 Railway Maintenance Equipment The Men and Machines That Keep the Railroads Running Voyager Press pp 78 96 ISBN 978 0760309759 Marre Louis A 1995 Diesel Locomotives The First Fifty Years Waukesha Wis USA Kalmbach pp 384 385 ISBN 978 0 89024 258 2 Suruliputus saatteli veturit viimeiselle matkalle in Finnish The Paragon Cristiani Compressed Steam System Archived 2017 12 11 at the Wayback Machine dslef dsl pipex com A German Diesel Pneumatic Locomotive Douglas self com Retrieved 2011 08 20 UK Money Guide Borrow Money Today Archived from the original on January 6 2009 Retrieved January 17 2009 Development of the Flameproof Diesel Vehicle Applied New Exhaust Gas Dry Type Treatment System Sciencelinks jp 2009 03 18 Archived from the original on 2012 02 17 Retrieved 2011 08 20 King Joe 2008 09 22 Engineering gets 1 million grant to make locomotives leaner greener Northern Illinois University Archived from the original on 2012 09 10 Retrieved 2011 08 06 Eilperin Juliet 2006 08 14 Attention to Locomotives Emissions Renewed The Washington Post Retrieved 2011 08 06 Hawthorne Michael February 14 2011 Metra finds alarming pollution on some trains Chicago Tribune Retrieved 2011 08 06 Wilkins Davell 2011 04 13 Study Installed Traps In Diesel Engines Reduce Pollution Levels Top News Retrieved 2011 08 06 Pollution on Metra Trains Worse Than Thought Report Fox Chicago News 2011 02 14 Retrieved 2011 08 06 Lydersen Kari April 21 2011 Black Carbon Testing Finds High Levels The New York Times Retrieved August 6 2011 Multi Engine GenSet Ultra Low Emissions Road Switcher Locomotive PDF National Railway Equipment Company Archived from the original PDF on 2012 02 10 Retrieved 2012 06 03 Railpower Technologies Products Archived from the original on January 14 2008 Retrieved 2012 06 03 RJ Corman Railpower Genset amp Hybrid Switchers Trainweb org Retrieved on 2013 08 16 Churella 1998 p 10 Churella 1998 p 19 Standardisation and Comparative Costs of Motive Power on B R Railway Magazine 60 61 January 1951 http www sdrm org faqs hostling html Archived 2011 01 30 at the Wayback Machine Phil Jern How to Boot a Steam Locomotive 1990 San Diego Railroad Museum SmartStart IIe Automatic Engine Start Stop System Ztr com Retrieved on 2013 08 16 Churella 1998 pp 12 17 a b Stover 213 Churella 1998 p 14 Brown H F 1959 Economic results of diesel electric motive power on the railways in the United States Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers 175 1 257 317 doi 10 1243 PIME PROC 1961 175 025 02 Sources Edit Churella Albert J 1998 From Steam to Diesel Managerial Customs and Organizational Capabilities in the Twentieth Century American Locomotive Industry Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 02776 0 Pinkepank Jerry A 1973 The Second Diesel Spotter s Guide Milwaukee WI Kalmbach Books ISBN 978 0 89024 026 7 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Diesel locomotives US Government test of GP38 2 locomotive with biodiesel fuel A 1926 article The Diesel Engine in Railway Transportation on Diesel locomotives Diesel locomotive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Diesel locomotive amp oldid 1140530587, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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