End of Service for VGN EL-2B Streamliners
    NW Mailing List 
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    Fri Oct 26 09:07:58 EDT 2012
    
    
  
Gordon:
 
Thanks for the update!  Here's a nice site on the Alco version; I  couldn't 
find anything about GE-built versions.  Some on "low cab" 44 ton  
switchers, but that's not the same. 
_http://www.harpoondatabases.com/encyclopedia/Entry2750.aspx_ (http://www.harpoondatabases.com/encyclopedia/Entry2750.aspx) 
 
(Mr. Moderator, we promise to return to N&W topics real soon!)
 
Dave Phelps
 
 
In a message dated 10/26/2012 8:16:42 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org writes:
Dave,
 
Yes, GE produced this "universal" locomotive.  We were  told that by the 
time it had been equipped with all of the "universal"  apparatus, it's weight 
would have exceeded the specified light axle load limit  dictated by the 
light rail infrastructure in many foreign countries, so the  superstructure of 
the locomotive was made of aluminum to keep the axle loading  within limits.
 
As I recall, this locomotive was out-shopped in its  narrow-gauge version, 
which caused no problem on the multi-gauge GE test  track.
 
Gordon Hamilton
----- Original Message ----- 
From:  _NW Mailing List_ (mailto:nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org)  
To: _nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org_ (mailto:nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org)  
Sent: Thursday, October 25, 2012 2:22  PM
Subject: Re: End of Service for VGN  EL-2B Streamliners
Gordon:
 
Thank you very much for sharing these wonderful experiences!
 
Yes, all rectifier locomotives and EMU cars must have smoothing  reactors 
to reduce the a.c. ripple riding on the d.c. to a level that will  allow the 
conventional d.c. traction motors (which really do NOT like this  a.c. 
component!) to commutate without excessive sparking.  Of course,  the smoothing 
reactors had a significant electromagnetic field  associated with them, as 
you describe, and experience such as the one you  describe quickly reminded 
folks of the need to shield the  surroundings.   Proper orientation helped, 
but brute force steel  shielding was often needed.  Out of curiosity I looked 
at the smoothing  reactor on 135 when it was parked down near the Link 
Museum last year (it's  clearly visible under the locomotive) and it's well 
shielded.
 
The mercury arc tubes used as rectifiers were pretty rugged and  reliable, 
but still inherently a weak spot.  When silicon  rectifier cells of 
sufficient rating were available, changeout was a  no-brainer.  The last few E-44's 
were build with silicon cells instead  of mercury arc tubes, and if I'm not 
mistaken all were eventually  retrofitted.  I was told that the mercury arc 
tubes were what limited  the rating to 4400 "diesel equivalent" hp. and that 
the changeout to  solid state rectifiers allowed a 5000 hp "diesel 
equivalent" continuous  rating.  The Budd-built "Silverliner" EMU cars used mercury 
arc tubes  in a phase-control mode* (silicon-control recitfiers - SCR's - of 
sufficient  rating were not yet available), and we quickly discovered that 
going around  curves, centrifugal force would pull the pool of mercury away 
from the  igniters and cause the cars to lose power.  Fortunately the tubes 
had  two igniters (the thought had been to use one and have the other as a  
spare), so they were quickly rewired to put the two in parallel.  I  never 
heard of this being a problem on EP-5s, EL-Cs or E-44s.
 
(*These tubes - two "back to back" - were placed between the  transformer 
secondary and the rectifiers [which by then, 1962, were solid  state].  By 
firing the tubes "on" at varying places on the a.c. wave,  the output voltage 
could be controlled to regulate the current.  Once  the polarity of the a.c. 
wave reversed, the tubes automatically shut off and  waited for the next 
"turn on" pulse to the igniter.)
 
I wasn't aware GE had build any of the "universal" locomotives.  I  knew of 
the Alco versions (called "MRS-1" for "Military Road Switcher")  which had 
GE electrical equipment (I *think* 539 engines; they were rated  1000 HP).  
There were several at Ft. Eustis when I was there for OCS  and "commanding a 
desk" in 1966-1969.  They belonged to the 714th  Railway Operating 
Battalion.  I'm not sure if they were left-over WWII  units or new production.  I 
thought the latter and may have  documentation in my archives somewhere, but I 
could be mis-remembering, it's  been known to happen!
 
I only took the NKP-DL&W Chicago-New York sleeper once, but will  never 
forget waking up to the beauty of the Delaware Water Gap from the  eastbound 
Lake Cities.   My one west-bound trip on the NKP was  Erie-Chicago the weekend 
the North Shore quit running.  Unfortunately  by then NKP passenger service 
was no longer PA's; we had two steam-generator  road switchers, a GP and 
NKP's only steam generator Alco road  switcher.  I came back on the New 
England States as the NKP schedule  just didn't work for getting home Sunday 
evening to go to work Monday  morning.  Y'all with good memories will recall that 
it snowed like ****  that weekend; the 'States made an unscheduled 
refueling stop at Collingswood  "just in case."
 
Thanks again!
 
Dave Phelps
 
 
In a message dated 10/25/2012 12:22:46 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org writes:
Dave,
 
Your mention of the New Haven Class EP-5 electric  locomotives reminds me 
of a story about them that I heard from  a fellow Mechanical Engineering 
student at VPI (now  Virginia Tech) in the 1955-56 time frame.  He was Gerald 
Healy  (spelling?), who had worked in GE's Locomotive and Car Equipment  
Department at Erie, PA, but who had just recently left to go back to  school.
 
He said that the first EP-5 to be completed was tested  on GE's test track 
there with a number of important observers to witness  the event.  
Initially, the light locomotive was run back and forth on  the test track and 
performed beautifully.  Then someone noticed ten  loaded cars of coal on the 
powerhouse track and suggested that the new  locomotive be coupled to them and 
pull them up and down the  track.
 
According to Gerald, after the air was pumped up on the  cars and the 
brakes released, the engineer pulled back on the controller  handle to start the 
train, but the locomotive just made a strange noise  and could not budge the 
ten cars!  He said there was  consternation among the observers that this 
supposedly powerful locomotive  could not pull 10 loaded cars!
 
As Gerald explained it, these locomotive used mercury  arc rectifier tubes 
to convert the AC from the trolley wire to DC for the  traction motors (like 
the VGN EL-C's), and they had "smoothing reactors"  to smooth out the 
rectified current.  The problem was that the  reactors were placed near the 
rectifier tubes and the reactors developed a  magnetic field somewhat 
proportional to the current passing through  them.  When the locomotive was operating 
light, the current was low  enough that the magnetic field of the reactors 
created no problem, but  when the current was increased in the attempt to 
start the ten loaded  cars, the magnetic field of the reactors was sufficient to 
extinguish the  arc in the nearby rectifier tubes!  Obviously, some "fix" 
was made  for this problem.
 
Your quote of the remark by the New Haven folks  that "GE had learned a lot 
about packaging the rectifier equipment since  the EP-5's" appears to lead 
credence to what Gerald told me.
 
Incidentally, after VPI I was drafted into the Army and  eventually 
assigned to the Signal Research and Development Laboratories at  Fort Monmouth, 
where I was assigned to a radio interference suppression  section.  One 
assignment, in company with a civilian engineer, was to  GE at Erie to run 
interference tests on a "universal"  diesel locomotive that GE had built for the US 
Army.  This  locomotive could be adapted to various track gauges, various 
coupler  arrangements and either air or vacuum brakes.  We set up our  
receivers along the test track and checked the unit for compliance with  military 
radio interference specifications.  I even got a short ride  on the test 
track.  I heard later that this locomotive saw service on  the Rio Grande narrow 
gauge, but I have often wondered about its ultimate  disposition.
 
While traveling out of Ft. Monmouth I took advantage of  assignments like 
this to ride trains whenever possible.  For the Erie  trip I took a PRR train 
on the New York & Long Branch RR from Red Bank  (near Ft. Monmouth) to 
Newark, NJ where I transferred to the  Newark Lackawanna station for a ride on 
the DL&W's Phoebe Snow to  Buffalo, NY, a fine trip except for the business 
car coupled to the rear  of the lounge car, blocking the view to the rear.  
Buffalo to Erie  was on the Nickel Plate Road.  As I rode over this track on 
the NKP  passenger train I had no inkling that some twenty years later I 
would be  operating diesel locomotives and hauling freight over these same  
tracks!  The occasion was the 82-day N&W Clerk's strike of 1978,  which saw 
many N&W employees pressed into unfamiliar service to  keep the freight moving. 
 During that time I logged some 11,000 miles  running locomotives over the 
248 miles of old NKP main line between  Bellevue, OH and Buffalo.
 
The return trip from Erie was the same at the  extremities, but instead of 
returning on the DL&W I  substituted a ride on the NYC's Empire State 
Express where I had an  unobstructed view out the rear of the lounge car on the 
Water Level  Route.  This lounge car even had a short rearward facing bench 
seat  at the rear windows for those people (like me) who wanted to see the  
railroad without getting a crick in their neck.
 
Gordon Hamilton
 
----- Original Message ----- 
From:  _NW Mailing List_ (mailto:nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org)  
To: _nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org_ (mailto:nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org)   
Sent: Sunday, October 21, 2012  12:27 PM
Subject: Re: End of Service for VGN  EL-2B Streamliners
Stewart:
 
You're thinking of what Vgn called the EL-C.  The EL-2b's were  the 
two-unit (back to back) "streamliners."  They had 25 Hz to DC  motor-generator sets 
to feed DC to their traction motors.
 
The rectifiers went straight from N&W to the New Haven in the  summer of 
1963,  NH arranged for a service engineer from the GE New  York office to come 
to New Haven and check them out.  As it  happened, that summer was when I 
was doing my three-month field  assignment as part of my 21-month rotating 
training assignments for what  was then the Locomotive and Car Equipment 
Department of GE, and I had  been assigned to the NY Office for that assignment 
(which was very  convenient because we were living on Long Island at the 
time).  I  was invited to come along for the inspection, which was a great  
experience.  The New Haven folks remarked that "GE had learned a  lot about 
packaging the rectifier equipment since the EP-5's."
 
Dave Phelps
 
 
In a message dated 10/21/2012 9:11:57 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org writes:
Hi Group, please forgive the ignorance of a  Yankee member.- Were the VGN 
EL-2b's, the "hood style" rectifier  locomotives delivered by General 
Electric to the VGN?  If so,  some of them came to the New Haven Railroad, probably 
in the 1960's  and probably by way of General Electric-Erie Works. They 
passed from  the New Haven into Penn Central then into Conrail.  I'm a member  
of the Railroad Museum of New England and the museum owns one of the  units 
in very faded Conrail blue and minus it's main transformer due  to it's 
concentration of PCB's in the transformer oil. It will never  run again, there's 
no main transformer and the 20 mile Naugatuck  Railroad subsidiary of the 
museum has absolutely no centenary.  
Stewart Fritts
----- Original Message ----- 
From:  _NW Mailing List_ (mailto:nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org)  
To: _NW Mailing List_ (mailto:nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org)  
Sent: Monday, October 08, 2012  9:39 PM
Subject: Re: End of Service for  VGN EL-2B Streamliners
Sorry I can't  answer all your inquiries about the EL2b's. I do have a 
note, of  which I do not remember the source, that says the EL2b's were  
scrapped at the Peck Iron 
& Metal  Co. in south Richmond. Maybe this will jog someone's memory with 
the details.
 
Jeff Sanders
 
 
From: NW Mailing List <_nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org_ 
(mailto:nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org) >
To: _nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org_ (mailto:nw-mailing-list at nwhs.org)   
Sent: Friday,  October 5, 2012 1:59 PM
Subject: End of Service for VGN  EL-2B Streamliners
I've seen several accounts of  the end of the EL-2Bs which say they were 
taken out of service and  scrapped between 1959 and 1962.  The early date is 
clearly  incorrect as McClure and Plant show several pictures in their book  
of these motors in service into at least Oct. 1960.  Can anyone  clear up 
the history of the final days of the EL-2Bs?  When  were they actually taken 
out of service?  Were they stored for  a while before disposal?  Were they 
sent back to General  Electric or were they scrapped by some local company?  
If so,  who, when and where?  Many thanks for your  help.
Tom
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