GE PowerHaul: Difference between revisions
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|30 units ordered via [[Lloyds TSB General Leasing|Lloyds TSB leasing]] for Freightliner. Initial 20 of ordered delivered to Freightliner. One unit (70 012) damaged in unloading and returned to company.<ref name="lloyds3">{{citation| url = http://www.mainlinediesels.net/index.php?nav=1000399| work = www.mainlinediesels.net| accessdate = Jan 2014|title = Lloyds TSB Class 70/0}}</ref> |
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Revision as of 15:12, 2 June 2017
For the UK version see British Rail Class 70 (diesel)
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Sources:[3] except where noted |
The GE PowerHaul is a class of mainline diesel-electric locomotives designed by General Electric. Thirty locomotives were ordered by Freightliner UK in 2007; the first locomotive was completed in July 2009 at GE's Erie, Pennsylvania plant.
The Turkish state owned rolling stock manufacturer TÜLOMSAŞ has a manufacturing agreement with GE to produce PowerHaul locomotives for European, African and Middle-Eastern markets. The TÜLOMSAŞ plant produced its first PowerHaul locomotive in February 2011. In November 2011 Australian engineering firm UGL Rail announced it was to develop a narrow gauge version of the class in association with GE.
Three main subclasses exist: PH37ACmi for UK railways, PH37ACi a version for mainland Europe and elsewhere built to UIC 505-1 vehicle gauge, and PH37ACmai a version for 3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm) gauge lines.
Versions of the locomotive include the Class 70 used by Freightliner (UK), the DE36000 of the Turkish State Railways, and the Korail Class 7600 (South Korea).
History and design
The PowerHaul Class are a 6 axle Co'Co design for heavy mainline freight operations - the design originated in a collaboration between Freightliner UK who required a more powerful freight locomotive, and General Electric who needed a launch customer for its entry into the European rolling stock market.[4] The locomotives are the first GE locomotives manufactured for the European market since the 'Blue Tiger' locomotive built in collaboration with AdTranz.[5]
To fit within European and UK mass and loading gauge restrictions GE used a relatively high revving engine (1500rpm),[note 1] giving a 20% increase in power-weight ratio. The engine uses the same design of transmission system as used in GE's North American AC drive locomotives: an AC alternator, with AC output rectified to an intermediate DC line, with separate inverters and inverter control for each traction motor,[6] auxiliary power is also supplied by the DC link, using electronic inverter based load control.[4] The PM37ACmi design uses a General Electric GTA series alternator, and 5GEB30 axle hung traction motors.[1]
The cab includes heating, air conditioning, and acoustic insulation; the driving controls are 'dial-less' - information is displayed using electronic panel displays. The cab design includes consideration for GSM-R and ERTMS.[4] One innovative feature of the design was the use of electrical power generated when using dynamic braking to supply auxiliary power - resulting in increase in overall efficiency.[1]
Freightliner placed an order for 30 units (originally designated JS37ACi) in November 2007.[7] The first two locomotives manufactured were for Freightliner in the United Kingdom, construction began in May 2009 in Erie, with much of the UK compatibility testing taking place in the US before shipping to the UK. Two locomotives were delivered to the UK in October 2009, and received permission for service use by December 2009.[4]
In December 2008 GE Transportation reached a manufacturing agreement with Tülomsas for the production of future PowerHaul locomotives for Eurasian, and African markets;[8][9] the initial contract was reported to be for production of 50 units, 30 for GE and 20 for TCDD.[10] In February 2011 Tülomsas completed the assembly of its first PowerHaul from a kit manufactured at GE's Erie plant;[11][12] the locomotive, built to a UK loading gauge was shipped to the United Kingdom in October 2012.[13]
In April 2012 GE announced that it was to use a PowerHaul locomotive to test its "Tempo" ERTMS system (Level 1 & 2). The locomotive is to be a Tülomsas built unit operated by an unnamed open access operator in Belgium, Netherlands, France, Germany and Switzerland, with operations starting 2013.[14] In September 2012 GE announce that freight operator Heavy Haul Power International (HHPI)would be the recipient of two to six locomotives, which would be used to obtain homologation certification.[15]
Engine
PowerHaul locomotives use a PowerHaul P616 diesel engine; based on the Jenbacher J616 gas engine.[note 2] The 16 cylinder 4 stroke engine uses the Miller cycle, which GE claims increases fuel efficiency over conventional 4 stroke engines, as well as reducing emissions. Rated power is 3,700 hp (2,800 kW) with an engine speed of 1500rpm; the engine meets EU stage IIIa emission standards.[5][16]
General Electric claims that the engine is more fuel efficient than contemporary competitors,[note 3] consuming 192g per kilowatt hour at full power output. EU IIIb emission standards are said to be achievable using exhaust gas recirculation and exhaust gas after-treatment by diesel oxidation catalyst.[17]
Sub-types
PH37ACmi
The subtype PH37ACmi was originally built for Freightliner UK with the TOPS designation given Class 70. The design is built to vehicle gauge defined by drawing 'UK L-A1-1806',[note 4][3] with a mass of 129 tonnes, Route Availability of RA7, fuel tank capacity of 6,000 L (1,300 imp gal; 1,600 US gal) and starting tractive effort of 544 kN (122,000 lbf).[3] The locomotives have a hood unit design, with two cabs.
PH37ACi
A subtype PH37Aci has been designed to be built to fit within the UIC 505-1 vehicle gauge.[19] Unlike the original version built for the UK loading gauge the design has a full width body.[15] There are two versions of the design, one with a 20 t (20 long tons; 22 short tons) axle load and 450 kN (100,000 lbf) starting tractive effort intended for European railways, and a 21 t (21 long tons; 23 short tons) axleload version with more powerful traction motors and starting tractive effort of 544 kN (122,000 lbf). The versions have axleload class L620 and L621 as defined by European Standard EN 15528 (2008).[note 5][3][19]
Unlike PH237ACmi the locomotives are expected to be built to a cowl unit external design, with dimensions of 21.7 m (71 ft 2.3 in) long, width 2.9 m (9 ft 6.17 in), and height 4.3 m (14 ft 1.29 in). The locomotives retain a twin cab design. Fuel tank capacity is 9,000 L (2,000 imp gal; 2,400 US gal), with 3,490 hp (2,600 kW) available for traction, and a braking force of 270 kN (61,000 lbf) maximum.[19] The European version is expected to be re-designed to meet 'European Driver Desk' recommendations, and UIC 612 standards, with a central driving position.[20] The L620 version is expected to have a redesigned bogie.[6] The track gauge for the PH37ACi can be from 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+1⁄2 in) to 1,668 mm (5 ft 5+21⁄32 in).[3]
Kits for the new design were expected to be shipped to TÜLOMSAŞ (Turkey) in early 2012.[16] A Tulomsas assembled locomotive in Heavy Haul International branding was exhibited at Innotrans trade fair in September 2012.[21]
European freight operator Heavy Haul Power International is expected to take delivery of pilot production 2-6 Powerhaul locomotives assembled at Tulomsas; the locomotives are expected to be used to get certification for operation in Germany and the Benelux states.[15]
PH37ACmai
In November 2011 GE and UGL Rail announced that it would build two prototype UGL Rail PH37ACmai 1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in) gauge PowerHaul locomotives. It is intended for use on the narrow gauge networks in Queensland and Western Australia. GE is to supply the power and traction package, with UGL constructing the locomotive frame, some of the work is to be subcontracted to India.[22][23] The first of three prototypes was nearing completion at its Broadmeadow factory in January 2014.[24][25]
Production and operators
Type | Operator | Operator class | Number | Date | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
PH37ACmi | Freightliner UK | Class 70/0 | 19 | 2007 (order) | 30 units ordered via Lloyds TSB leasing for Freightliner. Initial 20 of ordered delivered to Freightliner. One unit (70 012) damaged in unloading and returned to company.[26] |
PH37ACmi | TCDD / Colas Rail | TCDD DE37000[27] / BR Class 70/8 | 1 | 2011 (built) | Assembled in Turkey by Tulomsas as demonstrator loco. Initially numbered as TCDD 37001. Shipped to UK in 2012, renumbered 70 099. Acquired by Colas in 2013, renumbered 70 801.[28] |
PH37ACmi | Colas Rail | Class 70/8 | 10 | 2013 (order) | Colas Rail order for 10 units made in 2013.[29] Order made up from remainder of 2007 order of 30 for Lloyds leasing was taken up by Colas in 2013.[30] First Colas unit 70 801 is former TCDD demonstrator. |
PH37ACmi | Colas Rail | Class 70/8 | 7 | 2015 (order) | Colas Rail order for 7 units made in 2015. |
PH37ACi | HHPI | 2-6 (?) | 2012 (launch) | Launch customer Heavy Haul Power International GmbH (HHPI), for European mainland. Unveiled at Innotrans 2012. Initially used for European certification in Germany, and Benelux.[15][31] | |
PH37ACi | TCDD | TCDD DE 36000 | 20 | 2013 (order) | 20 units ordered for Turkish State Railways (TCDD) as part of an order of 50 to be assembled by Tulomsas.[10][32] Production of locomotives during 2014-.[33] |
PH37ACi | 30 | 2013 (order) | Units to be assembled for unspecified "'regional export markets' in Europe, the Middle East and North Africa.[32] | ||
PH37ACi | Korail | Korail Class 7600 | 25 | 2014 | Locomotives ordered by Korail in 2011 and being built in association with Hyundai Rotem for use on passenger and freight services from 2014.[34] Operating speed up to 150 km/h.[15] see also 한국철도공사 7600호대 디젤 기관차 (Korail Class 7600) |
PH37ACmai | UGL Rail | UGL class[24] | 3 | 2014 | 3 prototype 1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in) demonstrators built by UGL Rail, Broadmeadow[25] |
See also
- EMD Class 66, Euro 4000, Voith Maxima - contemporary mainline freight diesel engined competitors for the European market
Notes
- ^ The contemporary GEVO V12 used in its North American GE Evolution Series operates at a maximum 1050rpm, the EMD 710 at a maximum 900hp.[4]
- ^ GE Energy acquired the Austrian Jenbacher company in 2003, initially the engine was designed for stationery power applications.[16]
- ^ Compared to CAT C175, MTU 4000, and EMD 710 series engines
- ^ "UK L-A1-1806" refers to a locomotive gauge drawing produced by the BR CM&EE Dept. (British Rail Chief Mechanical and Electrical Engineer's Department) in 1970 version L-A1-1806. Superseded within Railway Group Standard GE/RT8073.[18]
- ^ EN 25528:2008 Railway applications - Line categories for managing the interface between load limits of vehicles and infrastructure, Appendix K
References
- ^ a b c d e "Freightliner PowerHaul loco design on show", www.railwaygazette.com, Railway Gazette International, 24 September 2008
- ^ a b c Gromacki 2010, 0m55s - 1m24s.
- ^ a b c d e PowerHaul Series specifications, GE Transportation
- ^ a b c d e David Shires (May 2011), "High powered: a transatlantic partnership", The Rail Engineer (79): 32–34
- ^ a b "PowerHaul brings Evolution technology to Europe", www.railwaygazette.com, Railway Gazette International, 26 November 2009
- ^ a b Gromacki 2010, 6m00s - 6m50s
- ^ Sources:
- "Freightliner Group Orders 30 Locomotives from GE - Transportation for UK Market", www.euroinvestor.co.uk, 7 November 2007
- "Freightliner Group Orders 30 Locomotives From GE – Transportation for UK Market", www.genewscenter.com, General Electric, 26 November 2007
- "GE enters UK loco market", www.railwaygazette.com, Railway Gazette International, 26 November 2007
- ^ "Tülomsas to assemble GE PowerHaul locomotives", www.railwaygazette.com, Railway Gazette International, 31 December 2008
- ^ "GE Transportation and Tülomsaş Combine Expertise To Supply Markets with GE's PowerHaul™ Series Locomotives", www.genewscenter.com, General Electric, 30 December 2008, archived from the original on 2012-03-07
{{citation}}
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- "First Turkey-Assembled Locomotive for U.S. General Electric Introduced". www.turkishny.com. 28 February 2011.
- "Avrupa'nın lokomotifi Türkiye'den yola çıkıyor". yenisafak.com.tr (in Turkish). 1 March 2011.
- ^ "Tülomsas rolls out Turkish PowerHaul", www.railwaygazette.com, Railway Gazette International, 1 March 2011
- ^ "TÜLOMSAŞ ve GE işbirliğiyle üretilen ilk PowerHaul ® lokomotif görücüye çıktı". www.tulomsas.com (Press release) (in Turkish). 28 February 2011.
- ^ "Turkish PowerHaul order expected as demonstrator arrives in UK", www.railwaygazette.com, 18 October 2012
- ^ "GE Transportation enters the ERTMS market". www.railwaygazette.com. Railway Gazette International. 25 April 2012.
- ^ a b c d e "European-profile PowerHaul locomotive to be unveiled at InnoTrans", www.railwaygazette.com, 10 September 2012
- ^ a b c "Eco-minded Powerhaul leads the way into global markets", www.getransportation.com, General Electric, 1 February 2011
- ^ Gromacki 2010, 2m10s - 3m0s
- ^ Sources:
- "GE/GN8573 Guidance on Gauging" (PDF), www.rgsonline.co.uk, Rail Safety and Standards Board Limited (RSSB), Appendix L Locomotive gauge – Vehicle Gauge for Locomotives, p.68, October 2009, archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-09-07
{{citation}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - "Impact Assessment for Changes to Railway Group Standards" (PDF), www.rgsonline.co.uk, Rail Safety and Standards Board Limited (RSSB), 19 March 2009[permanent dead link ]
- "GE/GN8573 Guidance on Gauging" (PDF), www.rgsonline.co.uk, Rail Safety and Standards Board Limited (RSSB), Appendix L Locomotive gauge – Vehicle Gauge for Locomotives, p.68, October 2009, archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-09-07
- ^ a b c Gromacki 2010, 0m50s - 2m10s
- ^ Gromacki 2010, 4m10s - 4m30s
- ^ Vantuonon, William C. (20 September 2012), "GE's continental-European PowerHaul debuts at InnoTrans", www.railwayage.com
- ^ "UGL and GE announce narrow-gauge PowerHaul", www.railwaygazette.com, Railway Gazette International, 22 November 2011
- ^ UGL and GE jointly launch new narrow-gauge locomotive in Australia Railway Technology 24 November 2011
- ^ a b UGL Class Railpage
- ^ a b "The UGL/GE Powerhaul Prototype Locomotives" Railway Digest January 2014 pages 40-41
- ^ "Lloyds TSB Class 70/0", www.mainlinediesels.net, retrieved Jan 2014
{{citation}}
: Check date values in:|accessdate=
(help) - ^ "Kurumsal Haberler > ESKİŞEHİR EĞİTİM MERKEZİ MÜDÜRLÜĞÜNDE YENİ EĞİTİMLER", kurumsal.tcdd.gov.tr (in Turkish), archived from the original on 2011-05-03,
TÜLOMSAŞ ve Amerikan GE Firması işbirliği ile üretilen DE37000 tipi lokomotifler hakkındaki kurs programı 29 Mart 2011 tarihinde açıldı
{{citation}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ "Demonstrator DE 37001 / 70099 / 70801", www.mainlinediesels.net, retrieved Jan 2014,
.. assembled by Tülomsas from Turkey. On February 28, 2011 the rollout of the dark green locomotive took place at Eskisehir in Turkey [..] tested by the Turkish Railways (TCDD) [..] numbered DE 37001 according to the Turkish numbering system [.. in] October 2012 [.] shipped to the UK. [..] A new number was applied: 70 099 [..] Late 2013, the locomotive was sold to Colas Rail Ltd. as part of an order for ten PowerHaul locomotives. For this purpose, it received the number 70 801
{{citation}}
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(help) - ^ "Colas Rail orders 10 GE Transportation PowerHaul locomotives", www.railwaygazette.com, 21 Nov 2013
- ^ "[GB] British PowerHauls: an overview", www.mainlinediesels.net, 22 Oct 2013
- ^ "HHPI 29000", www.mainlinediesels.net, retrieved Jan 2014
{{citation}}
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(help) - ^ a b "Turkish PowerHaul order confirmed". Railway Gazette International. 17 January 2013.
- ^ "TCDD PowerHaul deliveries well underway", www.mainlinediesels.net, 4 July 2014
- ^ "First Korean PowerHaul locomotive on test". Railway Gazette International. 23 January 2014.
Sources
- Gromacki, Brian (2010), "PowerHaul Presentation at InnoTrans 2010", YouTube, General Electric
- "GE's PowerHaul Series Locomotive", www.getransportation.com, GE Transportation, archived from the original on 8 August 2013, retrieved September 2012
{{citation}}
: Check date values in:|accessdate=
(help)
External links
- "PowerHaul Series Locomotive", www.getransportation.com, GE Transportation
- "The PowerHaul Locomotive (Some Assembly Required)", www.youtube.com, General Electric, 18 September 2012, corporate video