• Cleveland Union Termainl Locomotives

    From Peterwezeman@hotmail.com@1:2320/100 to All on Fri Mar 20 18:00:18 2015

    I came across pictures of these locomotives, which were used to take passenger trains in and out of the Cleveland Union Terminal when local ordinance did not allow steaming within the city limits:

    http://morphotoarchive.org/rvndb/rvnjpeg_img_rec.php?objno=RVN10359

    After the war, when diesels replaced steam locomotives, they were no longer needed in Cleveland. The New York Central then had them modified to run off its

    third rail system and used them to pull trains in and out of Grand Central Station.

    I find it interesting that the locomotive's superstructure is so much shorter than the undercarriage, about two-thirds the length. I would be interested in any information about why they were designed like this.

    Thank you,

    Peter Wezeman
    anti-social Darwinist

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  • From John Albert@1:2320/100 to Bob on Sat Mar 21 13:38:20 2015

    From: j.albert@snet.net

    On 3/21/15 1:21 PM, bob wrote:
    Electric locomotives of that era were heavy but not bulky.
    The GG1, under its elegant streamlined
    body, is in many ways similar. With improvements in technology post-war weights went down, so the number of axles was reduced significantly,
    leading to much more compact machines.

    The GG-1 was anything but "not bulky" inside.
    What space there was, was jam-packed with equipment, leaving little room
    for a man to move around inside them.

    I know, I spent time "inside them" moving them around!

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  • From Bob@1:2320/100 to Peterwezeman@hotmail.com on Sat Mar 21 18:21:02 2015

    From: rcp27@nospam.ac.uk

    On 2015-03-21 01:00:17 +0000, peterwezeman@hotmail.com said:

    I came across pictures of these locomotives, which were used to take passenger trains in and out of the Cleveland Union Terminal when local ordinance did not allow steaming within the city limits:

    http://morphotoarchive.org/rvndb/rvnjpeg_img_rec.php?objno=RVN10359

    After the war, when diesels replaced steam locomotives, they were no
    longer needed in Cleveland. The New York Central then had them modified
    to run off its third rail system and used them to pull trains in and
    out of Grand Central Station.

    I find it interesting that the locomotive's superstructure is so much
    shorter than the undercarriage, about two-thirds the length. I would be interested in any information about why they were designed like this.

    An interesting photograph, thanks for posting.

    Electric locomotives of that era were heavy but not bulky. This meant
    that while they required lots of axles to support the weight, there
    wasn't that much actual volume required to be filled with it. A lot of electric locomotives of the 1920s and 1930s had relatively short bodies
    on much longer frames. The "Crocodile" pattern is something of a
    classic (google for Ce 6/8). The GG1, under its elegant streamlined
    body, is in many ways similar. With improvements in technology
    post-war weights went down, so the number of axles was reduced
    significantly, leading to much more compact machines.

    Robin

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  • From Bob@1:2320/100 to John Albert on Sat Mar 21 22:18:58 2015

    From: rcp27@nospam.ac.uk

    On 2015-03-21 17:38:19 +0000, John Albert said:

    On 3/21/15 1:21 PM, bob wrote:
    Electric locomotives of that era were heavy but not bulky.
    The GG1, under its elegant streamlined
    body, is in many ways similar. With improvements in technology post-war
    weights went down, so the number of axles was reduced significantly,
    leading to much more compact machines.

    The GG-1 was anything but "not bulky" inside.
    What space there was, was jam-packed with equipment, leaving little
    room for a man to move around inside them.

    I know, I spent time "inside them" moving them around!

    I don't doubt that the GG1 were "compact" inside, but the basic layout,
    with the cabs a long way back and the narrow "nose" sections sacrifices
    a lot of potential internal space that would be available with a
    cab-at-the-end layout. My point is the layout sacrifices a lot of
    potential internal space because the internal equipment didn't need it.

    Robin

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  • From Hank@1:2320/100 to Rcp27@nospam.ac.uk on Sun Mar 22 00:06:58 2015

    From: hankvc@blackhole.lostwells.org

    In article <mekn6e$b5u$1@dont-email.me>, bob <rcp27@nospam.ac.uk> wrote:
    On 2015-03-21 17:38:19 +0000, John Albert said:

    On 3/21/15 1:21 PM, bob wrote:
    Electric locomotives of that era were heavy but not bulky.
    The GG1, under its elegant streamlined
    body, is in many ways similar. With improvements in technology post-war >>> weights went down, so the number of axles was reduced significantly,
    leading to much more compact machines.

    The GG-1 was anything but "not bulky" inside.
    What space there was, was jam-packed with equipment, leaving little
    room for a man to move around inside them.

    I know, I spent time "inside them" moving them around!

    I don't doubt that the GG1 were "compact" inside, but the basic layout,
    with the cabs a long way back and the narrow "nose" sections sacrifices
    a lot of potential internal space that would be available with a >cab-at-the-end layout. My point is the layout sacrifices a lot of
    potential internal space because the internal equipment didn't need it.

    Well, if you'd ever had the opportunity to look inside the New Haven
    EP-3a boxcab electrics, you wouldn't have found much unoccupied volume.
    Keep in mind that the GG-1 was just another incarnation of the EP-3a
    design, with larger motors and the streamlined shell. Both had to
    accomodate a very large 25 hz stepdown transformer built with 1930's technology.

    Hank

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  • From Mroberds@att.net@1:2320/100 to Peterwezeman@hotmail.com on Sun Mar 22 08:59:54 2015

    peterwezeman@hotmail.com wrote:
    I came across pictures of these locomotives, which were used to take passenger trains in and out of the Cleveland Union Terminal when local ordinance did not allow steaming within the city limits:

    http://morphotoarchive.org/rvndb/rvnjpeg_img_rec.php?objno=RVN10359

    [...] I find it interesting that the locomotive's superstructure is so
    much shorter than the undercarriage, about two-thirds the length.

    At first glance, it sure does look like the body of a streetcar or a
    small electric locomotive, dropped onto the frame and wheels of a much
    larger steam? locomotive.

    I would be interested in any information about why they were designed
    like this.

    I don't *know*, but I can *guess*...

    Looking at Wikipedia (would they lie to you?), the picture you linked
    is probably a New York Central "P motor". http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NYC_P_Motor

    These were preceded by the "T motor", which seems to have a similar
    "short body, long frame" design.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NYC_T-Motor

    The T motors in turn were preceded by the "S motor", which seems to
    have been pretty early in the electric locomotive business (1904). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NYC_S-Motor

    The picture on the Wikipedia article, and others online, show that
    the S motor body was just about as long as the frame - similar to a
    modern diesel locomotive.

    Two days after the S motors went into service, there was a bad
    derailment, killing 24. Per Wiki, "The investigation identified design
    flaws involving the long rigid wheelbase and its performance at high
    speed. The solution was to convert the entire class to use 2 axle
    leading and trailing trucks to better guide the locomotive around
    curves." and "With weight split between powered and unpowered axles the
    S motors were never completely satisfactory at pulling long heavy trains
    at high speed. The 1907 accident only made matters worse with additional unpowered axles being added [...]".

    The T motors had all powered axles. I suspect this might have been the motivation for making the frame longer, to have enough room to fit them
    all in. If Alco-GE found that all of the control equipment,
    transformers, cab, etc, would fit in less length than the frame, then it
    seems reasonable to have a shorter body. Also, they may have re-used a
    body design from some other locomotive.

    The P motors had some idler axles as well, so they probably also needed
    the long frame. If the body from the T motors worked, they probably
    didn't see any reason to change it for the P motors.

    Again, this is speculation based on Wikipedia articles. Take it with
    as much salt as you think you need to.

    Matt Roberds

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  • From John Albert@1:2320/100 to Mroberds@att.net on Sun Mar 22 21:15:58 2015

    From: j.albert@snet.net

    On 3/22/15 4:59 AM, mroberds@att.net wrote:
    The T motors in turn were preceded by the "S motor", which seems to
    have been pretty early in the electric locomotive business (1904). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NYC_S-Motor

    Back at the end of the 1960's, I got a ride around one of the "loops" in
    GCT on one of these. I recall quite a bit of room in the cab, all the electrical equipment was in the "noses".

    And as a Harmon hostler in 1983, got to climb up on one of the last
    examples at Harmon yard. May have even moved it a bit, can't remember!

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  • From Peterwezeman@hotmail.com@1:2320/100 to Bob on Fri Apr 3 17:40:42 2015

    On Saturday, March 21, 2015 at 12:21:01 PM UTC-5, bob wrote:
    On 2015-03-21 01:00:17 +0000, peterwezeman@hotmail.com said:

    I came across pictures of these locomotives, which were used to take passenger trains in and out of the Cleveland Union Terminal when local ordinance did not allow steaming within the city limits:

    http://morphotoarchive.org/rvndb/rvnjpeg_img_rec.php?objno=RVN10359

    After the war, when diesels replaced steam locomotives, they were no longer needed in Cleveland. The New York Central then had them modified
    to run off its third rail system and used them to pull trains in and
    out of Grand Central Station.

    I find it interesting that the locomotive's superstructure is so much shorter than the undercarriage, about two-thirds the length. I would be interested in any information about why they were designed like this.

    An interesting photograph, thanks for posting.

    Electric locomotives of that era were heavy but not bulky. This meant
    that while they required lots of axles to support the weight, there
    wasn't that much actual volume required to be filled with it. A lot of electric locomotives of the 1920s and 1930s had relatively short bodies
    on much longer frames. The "Crocodile" pattern is something of a
    classic (google for Ce 6/8). The GG1, under its elegant streamlined
    body, is in many ways similar. With improvements in technology
    post-war weights went down, so the number of axles was reduced significantly, leading to much more compact machines.

    Robin

    My thanks to all who replied. I conclude from the various comments that a locomotive like the Cleveland Union Terminal units, operating off 3,000 volts DC, needed a lot less electrical machinery on board than did for example a GG1 using 25 hz AC at much
    higher voltage, and so needed less space to house it, hence the shorter superstructure.

    Peter Wezeman
    anti-social Darwinist

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