• GP40MC specs

  • Discussion relating to commuter rail, light rail, and subway operations of the MBTA.
Discussion relating to commuter rail, light rail, and subway operations of the MBTA.

Moderators: sery2831, CRail

  by butts260
 
CRail wrote:As a Mechanical employee at BET / Seashore life member often says, a locomotive is nothing but a subway car with its own power station (I'll bet anyone else who's active up there will know who I'm talking about :wink:).
Um... are subway cars now equipped with traction control?? An internet Siemens AG ad says that an SD70MAC has 175,500# starting tractive effort with a locomotive weight of 415,000#, implying 42% adhesion, using their traction control units. I wonder if the "Electricals" agree on the "a locomotive is nothing but ..."
  by MBTA3247
 
sery2831 wrote:Okay, the engine has RPMs, motors are electric.
Irrelevant. They both rotate, therefore RPM is a valid measurement for both.
butts260 wrote:
CRail wrote:As a Mechanical employee at BET / Seashore life member often says, a locomotive is nothing but a subway car with its own power station (I'll bet anyone else who's active up there will know who I'm talking about :wink:).
Um... are subway cars now equipped with traction control??
Probably, but mainly for dealing with wheel slip.
  by CRail
 
MBTA3247 wrote:Irrelevant. They both rotate, therefore RPM is a valid measurement for both.
Except RPM stands for Revolutions Per Minute, and I'm fairly certain electric motors don't revolve. Nice try though.
  by diburning
 
Actually, yes they do. The shaft of the motor revolves. In locomotives, there is a gear attached to the shaft which meshes with a gear welded to the axle to turn the wheel. The shaft is part of the motor (without the shaft, the motor would just be an electromagnet rapidly flipping its poles with no physical movement involved, and at that point, whether it technically is a motor or not is questionable)

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  by MBTA3247
 
CRail wrote:
MBTA3247 wrote:Irrelevant. They both rotate, therefore RPM is a valid measurement for both.
I'm fairly certain electric motors don't revolve.
You're thinking of linear induction motors. ;)
  by MBTA1052
 
So what happened with 1132??
  by mbta1051dan
 
MBTA1052 wrote:So what happened with 1132??
Wrong thread, think you were looking for the top-deck discussion.
  by MBTA1052
 
No I mean how did 1132 get into the Deadline??? Did the tractor Motor burn out or something to cause the engine to be tooken Out Of Service??
  by ns3010
 
Where does it say anything about it being in the deadline? A quick search of "1132 deadline" shows all posts from 2007...
  by diburning
 
1132 is in Altoona.... Check the top-deck thread. 1132 has been at Altoona since May. According to NETransit, it needs new traction motors and a new main generator.

1132 had already been sent to AMP in Dansville for top-deck, but was sent to Altoona for further work.
  by CRail
 
mbta1052 wrote:No I mean how did 1132 get into the Deadline??? Did the tractor Motor burn out or something to cause the engine to be tooken Out Of Service??
No really you have the wrong thread. This is for specifications regarding the locomotive in general, not for individual locomotives. Also, engines are taken out of service. Sorry to nitpick but my gears are grinding.
  by BandA
 
What microprocessor(s) does the GP40MC use?
  by Engineer Spike
 
BandA wrote: Wed Apr 13, 2022 12:40 pm What microprocessor(s) does the GP40MC use?
Good question which I'd like to know too. Did they retain the original -2 to be parts compatible with the F40 fleet/ If not, do they have a EM2000, or an aftermarket control system?
  by mbrproductions
 
I thought it was a Cummins Microprocessor, I was told the "MC" stood for "Microprocessor Cummins", instead of "Massachusetts Commuter"