Railroad Forums 

Discussion relating to the B&O up to it's 1972 merger into Chessie System. Visit the B&O Railroad Historical Society for more information. Also discussion of the C&O up to 1972. Visit the C&O Historical Society for more information. Also includes the WM up to 1972. Visit the WM Historical Society for more information.
 #1232123  by 25Hz
 
I have been curious for some while about what would happen if the short-lived M1 was converted to diesel/oil burning vs coal.

I've read that coal dust mucked up the traction motors, so, would such a configuration have lived longer, and if so would it be working today's trains?

I also read that its top speed was something like 110 mph... that could be useful.



Any thoughts?

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 #1232132  by hutton_switch
 
I personally think that coal dust fouling the traction motors was only the tip of the iceberg on this ill-fated locomotive. Design and mechanical problems plagued it as well as other steam turbine locomotives that ran on other railroads. The M-1 was continually in the shop for repairs, and any locomotive, regardless of design, if it spends more time in the shop than out on the road making revenue for the railroad, is a lemon. Read the link below at http://www.steamlocomotive.com" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;, which should give you a good overview of the problems with this and other steam turbine designs, and should help you to draw conclusions about the steam turbine concept as a whole:

http://www.steamlocomotive.com/turbine/#nw

Wade
 #1232285  by Adirondacker
 
25Hz wrote:I have been curious for some while about what would happen if the short-lived M1 was converted to diesel/oil burning vs coal.

I've read that coal dust mucked up the traction motors, so, would such a configuration have lived longer, and if so would it be working today's trains?

I also read that its top speed was something like 110 mph... that could be useful.



Any thoughts?
Each time you convert energy from one form to another there are losses. Converting the oil to steam to run a turbine doesn't make sense. Not in power plant that has to be relatively compact and relatively lightweight. Just run the turbine with the oil directly.
 #1232481  by 25Hz
 
Adirondacker wrote:
25Hz wrote:I have been curious for some while about what would happen if the short-lived M1 was converted to diesel/oil burning vs coal.

I've read that coal dust mucked up the traction motors, so, would such a configuration have lived longer, and if so would it be working today's trains?

I also read that its top speed was something like 110 mph... that could be useful.



Any thoughts?
Each time you convert energy from one form to another there are losses. Converting the oil to steam to run a turbine doesn't make sense. Not in power plant that has to be relatively compact and relatively lightweight. Just run the turbine with the oil directly.
Would a non-steam oil fired turbine of similar configuration been more successful then? I mean, no need to carry water or have a boiler. Only real drawback i see is lower weight as fuel is used would mean the trains it was assigned to would need to take that into account...? And low speed fuel consumption would need to be addressed, perhaps a dual turbine, one for low speeds and then once near a set MPH you fired up the second turbine?

And hutton_switch thanks for those links!!
 #1232658  by Adirondacker
 
25Hz wrote: And low speed fuel consumption would need to be addressed, perhaps a dual turbine, one for low speeds and then once near a set MPH you fired up the second turbine?

And hutton_switch thanks for those links!!
They've tried that. People with power systems engineering degrees and decades of experience. The same people have tried other things. Other people with similar depth of knowledge have tried. They can get it work. It uses too much fuel. For something that sits on the ground there are better solutions.
 #1232957  by 25Hz
 
So, what then would a modern M1 look like? Could putting the turbine at its most efficient setting, and allowing extra power to be dumped into ultracapacitors work? How about using multiple smaller turbines, such as those from helicopters or smaller yet and staging them based on power needs?
 #1233165  by ExCon90
 
Considering that the whole purpose of the M1 was an attempt to prolong the life of the (on-line) coal industry, I don't see that there would be much interest in converting it to oil. If a locomotive is going to burn oil, just get a diesel -- which they ultimately did.
 #1233183  by Adirondacker
 
25Hz wrote:So, what then would a modern M1 look like? Could putting the turbine at its most efficient setting, and allowing extra power to be dumped into ultracapacitors work? How about using multiple smaller turbines, such as those from helicopters or smaller yet and staging them based on power needs?
There was some discussion about how the spare turbines, still new in the box, that New York State had in inventory for it's turbine powered trains.. were stock helicopter turbines and could be sold off as new-in-box parts for helicopters. I have no way to evaluate whether or not that was true. Locomotives don't have to fly, there are better solutions for providing power to something that stays firmly on the ground in normal use.
 #1235949  by mmi16
 
From the C&O perspective the most import thing about the M-1 was that it burn coal. Coal was the commodity that all the C&O profits were built on. At the time of the M-1 C&O managment wanted to show their customers that C&O was committed to using coal to conduct their business - the same kind of thinking the kept the N&W in steam as long as they did and they had their own turbine failure the 'Jawn Henry'.