If you register, you can do a lot more. And become an active part of our growing community. You'll have access to hidden forums, and enjoy the ability of replying and starting conversations.

V4 2-6-2 No. 3403

Тема в разделе 'Steam Traction', создана пользователем Foxhunter, 30 янв 2018.

  1. LMS2968

    LMS2968 Part of the furniture

    Дата регистрации:
    1 сен 2006
    Сообщения:
    3.072
    Симпатии:
    5.361
    Пол:
    Мужской
    Род занятий:
    Lecturer retired: Archivist of Stanier Mogul Fund
    Адрес:
    Wigan
    Heritage Railway Volunteer:
    Yes I am an active volunteer
    It wasn't just company loyalties: he had a thing against the Lancashire & Yorkshire, despite having served his apprenticeship at Horwich.
     
  2. S.A.C. Martin

    S.A.C. Martin Part of the furniture

    Дата регистрации:
    31 авг 2010
    Сообщения:
    5.615
    Симпатии:
    9.418
    Пол:
    Мужской
    Род занятий:
    Asset Engineer (Signalling), MNLPS Treasurer
    Адрес:
    London
    Heritage Railway Volunteer:
    Yes I am an active volunteer
    That in itself is part of the problem, and I refer you back to the Thompson and Gresley threads where we have discussed this amongst other issues in railway history writing, at length.
     
  3. Cartman

    Cartman Part of the furniture

    Дата регистрации:
    14 дек 2015
    Сообщения:
    2.755
    Симпатии:
    2.109
    Пол:
    Мужской
    Род занятий:
    Van driver
    Адрес:
    Cheshire
    Heritage Railway Volunteer:
    No I do not currently volunteer
    I've read some of Cox s works and he didn't seem very keen on the LNWR either
     
    Bluenosejohn и LMS2968 нравится это.
  4. MellishR

    MellishR Resident of Nat Pres Friend

    Дата регистрации:
    16 апр 2009
    Сообщения:
    8.911
    Симпатии:
    5.847
    Or perhaps because of having served his apprenticeship there?
     
  5. 35B

    35B Nat Pres stalwart

    Дата регистрации:
    18 июн 2011
    Сообщения:
    28.731
    Симпатии:
    28.657
    Пол:
    Мужской
    Адрес:
    Grantham
    Heritage Railway Volunteer:
    No I do not currently volunteer
    The challenge is in distinguishing between the two motives, especially in a field where emotion is dominant. The idea of doing a low cost, high impact, thing like a smokebox is a good piece of marketing - the question I ask before parting with my hard earned is how that early PR gain is to be followed through and turned into success.

    That is where some projects have done well, and others, well, less so.
     
  6. Jimc

    Jimc Part of the furniture

    Дата регистрации:
    8 сен 2005
    Сообщения:
    4.117
    Симпатии:
    4.821
    Род занятий:
    Once computers, now part time writer I suppose.
    Адрес:
    SE England
    Heritage Railway Volunteer:
    No I do not currently volunteer
    At RA8 the Britannia had* no wider RA on Western lines than the Kings, so wasn't suitable to replace very many of the pre nationalisation express classes. They surely would have needed something with decent RA but more capable than a 5 had steam gone on long enough for post WW1 locomotives to need replacing.

    (* or, it seems, arguably should have had. As discussed below it seems they were given red route availability in spite of having an appreciably greater axle load than any GWR red restricted locomotive)
     
    Last edited: 23 окт 2023
    S.A.C. Martin нравится это.
  7. estwdjhn

    estwdjhn Member

    Дата регистрации:
    24 янв 2013
    Сообщения:
    342
    Симпатии:
    693
    Род занятий:
    Boilermaker
    Heritage Railway Volunteer:
    Yes I am an active volunteer
    Within this there are also different boiler designs - you can get boilers which are over/under barreled/fireboxed. Some locos have lots more boiler barrel (and thus steam space) for a given grate area than others.
    If you are building a shunting loco, lots of steam reserve is good - it allows you to have a relatively smaller grate, burn less coal, then mortgage the boiler harder during bursts of activity to compensate. It does mean that you can often easily "wind" the loco if you attempt to use it hard for a sustained period. This can make some of the smaller industrials quite entertaining to fire when used for longer runs (an old boy where I'm involved will observe ruefully about some locos "she's not a line engine").

    On the other hand, steam reserve is less valuable on a main line express loco, as most of the time you will be trying to work the loco in something of a "steady state", where the heat from the fire produces steam the rate at which is consumed.

    This trade off is well known to boiler designers - more steam reserve is pretty much always a good thing, but available space and weight are limited, so you have to decide how much you really need!
     
    Jamessquared и LMS2968 нравится это.
  8. MellishR

    MellishR Resident of Nat Pres Friend

    Дата регистрации:
    16 апр 2009
    Сообщения:
    8.911
    Симпатии:
    5.847
    Is that right, that a Class 7 Pacific, with its weight spread over one more axle than a Class 8 King's, had no wider route availability?
    Even if you count the Counties as express locos, there were only three post WW1 GWR express classes, those and the Kings and Castles. Clans would hardly have been suitable to replace any of those. If you add the mixed traffic classes, Halls, Granges and Manors, the replacements would have been the Standard Class 5s and Class 4s, so again not a role for Clans.
    Edit: BTW we have some serious thread drift here.
     
  9. Johnb

    Johnb Nat Pres stalwart

    Дата регистрации:
    3 дек 2014
    Сообщения:
    15.537
    Симпатии:
    18.383
    Пол:
    Мужской
    Род занятий:
    Retired, best job I've ever had
    Адрес:
    Buckinghamshire
    Heritage Railway Volunteer:
    Yes I am an active volunteer
    I don’t think it is correct, the Britannias were red route availability, the same as a Castle. They worked into Cornwall which the Kings couldn’t
     
  10. peckett

    peckett Member

    Дата регистрации:
    26 сен 2006
    Сообщения:
    946
    Симпатии:
    623
    Britannia's did, Plymouth to Penance, I've been pulled by one several times from Plymouth to Par a vv ,when holidaying at Newquay. When pulling hard the Britannia's suffered from a too and fro action,I remembered pulling away from Par with 70019 Lightning on the front, passengers heads were also too ing and froing. Please see attached 70016 Ariel waiting to take over the Cornish Rivera Express at Plymouth ,for Penzance. Summer 1953
     

    Вложения:

  11. Jamessquared

    Jamessquared Nat Pres stalwart

    Дата регистрации:
    8 мар 2008
    Сообщения:
    27.790
    Симпатии:
    64.453
    Адрес:
    LBSC 215
    Heritage Railway Volunteer:
    Yes I am an active volunteer
    Which was precisely the rationale in the boiler design of the Maunsell Z class 0-8-0 shunters. Holcroft writes (“Locomotive Adventure, vol. 1, page 150):

    “It was recognised that the required conditions for the boiler were that it should have a large capacity for water and a moderate area of grate to minimise fuel losses during standing periods; the large water capacity stored the heat of the fire at the end of a movement, avoiding safety valve losses, and kept it available for starting the next movement. A standard Brighton non-superheated boiler which measured up to these requirements was adopted. Saturated steam was used because a superheater is useless and a source of waste of steam in intermittent duties of a shunter, and the engine is more responsive and controllable without it.”
    Tom
     
    Hampshire Unit и osprey нравится это.
  12. Jimc

    Jimc Part of the furniture

    Дата регистрации:
    8 сен 2005
    Сообщения:
    4.117
    Симпатии:
    4.821
    Род занятий:
    Once computers, now part time writer I suppose.
    Адрес:
    SE England
    Heritage Railway Volunteer:
    No I do not currently volunteer
    Allocated red were they indeed! At 20-5 on the driving wheels according to the weight diagram I've found, and two cylinders at that, its quite a relaxation from the days when the Great Bear was heavily route restricted at 20-0 . The typical red limit was 19-10, although the Castles and Counties were 19-14. Am I right in thinking the Clan was 19-0?
     
    Last edited: 23 окт 2023
  13. martin1656

    martin1656 Nat Pres stalwart Friend

    Дата регистрации:
    8 дек 2014
    Сообщения:
    19.260
    Симпатии:
    12.514
    Пол:
    Мужской
    Адрес:
    St Leonards
    Heritage Railway Volunteer:
    No I do not currently volunteer
    As would mine, its almost there now, its 90% complete, possibly more and should be running sometime in 2024, the p2 will at some stage run, , as long as its trouble free for the final assembly, hopefully the issues identified with the boiler on Tornado the p2 doesn't suffer the same problems, will be learnt from, and measures taken foreward to ensure it does not effect the P2,
     
    Cartman нравится это.
  14. Eightpot

    Eightpot Resident of Nat Pres Friend

    Дата регистрации:
    10 авг 2006
    Сообщения:
    8.340
    Симпатии:
    2.506
    Пол:
    Мужской
    Род занятий:
    Engineer Emeritus
    Адрес:
    Aylesbury
    Heritage Railway Volunteer:
    Yes I am an active volunteer
    As E. S. Cox wrote of being quite chuffed that Riddles chose an L & Y chimney shape for the BR 'Standards', I don't think that statement really holds water.
     
  15. Jimc

    Jimc Part of the furniture

    Дата регистрации:
    8 сен 2005
    Сообщения:
    4.117
    Симпатии:
    4.821
    Род занятий:
    Once computers, now part time writer I suppose.
    Адрес:
    SE England
    Heritage Railway Volunteer:
    No I do not currently volunteer
    The impression I have is that Cox wasn't very keen on anything he hadn't had a hand in designing!
     
    Cartman, S.A.C. Martin и LMS2968 нравится это.
  16. 8126

    8126 Member

    Дата регистрации:
    17 мар 2014
    Сообщения:
    830
    Симпатии:
    974
    Пол:
    Мужской
    I think it has also been noted that the fact that Cox and Eric Langridge somehow contrived to almost never mention each other in their combined works, other than an aside by Langridge that could be viewed as a dig, despite their quite obviously convergent spheres of operation, suggests that he wasn't exactly everyone's cup of tea at the time either.

    Mind you, I could also imagine that being true of Langridge.
     
    Dunfanaghy Road, S.A.C. Martin и LMS2968 нравится это.
  17. 35B

    35B Nat Pres stalwart

    Дата регистрации:
    18 июн 2011
    Сообщения:
    28.731
    Симпатии:
    28.657
    Пол:
    Мужской
    Адрес:
    Grantham
    Heritage Railway Volunteer:
    No I do not currently volunteer
    Specifically on the to & fro action, is that also linked to the number of cylinders - with 3 or 4 cylinder locomotives having a natural damping action?
     
    Hampshire Unit нравится это.
  18. 8126

    8126 Member

    Дата регистрации:
    17 мар 2014
    Сообщения:
    830
    Симпатии:
    974
    Пол:
    Мужской
    In short, yes, although damping isn't really the right word.

    With a two-cylinder engine and cranks at 90 degrees (which they all are) you cannot perfectly balance the reciprocating motion of the connecting rods, crossheads and pistons. You can add rotating mass to the wheels to cancel the longitudinal surging it causes, but that creates a vertical imbalance you did not previously have, creating the hammer blow to the track and underlying structures you will see referenced in various places. So most designs tried to strike some sort of compromise in their fraction of the reciprocating mass that was balanced. More balance means better running at speed (until the wheels start lifting off the rails) but worse route availability. The only mitigation really available is to make the lightest possible set of reciprocating components, relative to the mass of the locomotive.

    Four-cylinder engines are easy. You have a pair of two-cylinder engines set 180 degrees apart, with immediate excellent balance because the forces cancel, unless you start using 135 degree crank angles for 8 exhaust beats per revolution. Three-cylinder engines can also be arranged to be pretty well balanced, as long as all the sets of motion are well matched in mass and near enough in the same plane. But two-cylinder engines are firmly in the realm of compromise.
     
    Sunnieboy, S.A.C. Martin, 35B и ещё 1-му нравится это.
  19. Hermod

    Hermod Well-Known Member

    Дата регистрации:
    6 май 2017
    Сообщения:
    1.109
    Симпатии:
    317
    Пол:
    Мужской
    Адрес:
    Klitmoeller,Denmark
    Heritage Railway Volunteer:
    No I do not currently volunteer
    He sounds a little envious talking about Hungarian 4-8-0 (twice I seem to remember) and impressed by the 2-6-4 from Golsdorf.
     
  20. 61624

    61624 Part of the furniture

    Дата регистрации:
    27 сен 2006
    Сообщения:
    5.294
    Симпатии:
    3.599
    Heritage Railway Volunteer:
    Yes I am an active volunteer
    I think that as a designer of modern locos he just wasn't that impressed by some of the cruder efforts of his predecessors
     

Поделиться этой страницей