Moderator: MEC407
mick wrote:They were dead going to Waterville. The "clicking" noise you hear is the moisture release valve or "spitter" on the main reservior. When air is compressed, it gets hot and wet. The spitter keeps water from building up inside the reservior.
mick wrote:When an engine is dead, the compressor is not running, so the Main reservior is empty on that unit. The spitter is still running though, and it makes a much more resonant and metallic "pong" sounding noise in an empty reservior.
Tim Mullins wrote:Pan-Am, Guilford, either or has many dead units in tow...trust me, I use to haul them.
mick wrote:When an engine is dead, the compressor is not running, so the Main reservior is empty on that unit. The spitter is still running though, and it makes a much more resonant and metallic "pong" sounding noise in an empty reservior.
guilford88panam wrote:Okay I see. But how do you know these locos are dead? Do you work for Pan Am? Is it minor or big? Thanks for answering my questions.

mick wrote:I stand corrected. I guess when a unit is not running, it just makes those little noises stand out more.
NV290 wrote:mick wrote:I stand corrected. I guess when a unit is not running, it just makes those little noises stand out more.
When they are not running you hear all sorts of sounds you never did before. Flat Spots, air leaks, creaks and groans. Idling hides all those nasty sounds!
mick wrote:I meant "dead" as in not running. I don't know the particulars about these engines, but it is pretty safe to assume that engines shut down in a train going east are headed to Waterville.
Will they ever come back? Who knows, sometimes units sit at Waterville for years, then are suddenly ressurected....Or cut up. Maybe they just were out of fuel.
MEC407 wrote:guilford88panam wrote:Okay I see. But how do you know these locos are dead? Do you work for Pan Am? Is it minor or big? Thanks for answering my questions.
I think what he meant by "dead" is that the units were not running -- i.e. they were shut down. I don't think he meant dead as in "inoperable." Mick, am I right?
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