jis
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I find the published 7Mw number for the Avelia Liberty a bit odd, since after the Sud-Est sets, the minimum power for all TGVs has been at least 8.8Mw. It might have something to do with what is possible at 25Hz and 12.5kV within weight limits. Also gradients on the NEC are really tame compared to what one finds on LGVs. The most powerful mainland TGV is the TGV 2N2 at 9.4Mw, and of course the TMST (Eurostar) at 12.2Mw, but that is a much more capacious and longer train.12 K HP would be just under 9000kw, what you are saying makes sense. don't know what the heck I was looking at
One thing that people need to understand and internalize is that unlike the current Acelas which have 85' long cars, the Liberty sets will have shorter TGV-like cars. You can get a feeling for how short by considering that in the Liberty sets on an average there are 49 seats per car, while in the Acelas there are 61. This number is computed by simply dividing the number of seats by the number of revenue cars (389/8 for Liberty, 5 for Acela), thus not differentiating between first class and economy class seating. but it gives a good indicator, and it also shows why a single vestibule with doors per car is adequate. Putting in two vestibules per car would simply reduce capacity for no particular gain.
Incidentally 212m divided by 11 assuming power heads are the same length as cars is about 19.3m give or take. So each car is around 63' long, just as a rough estimate.
I wonder if they stay within the 17 tonnes axle load or overrun that a bit to allow for the extra weight of the tilt system. If they are close to that axle weight then It is probably a safe guess that each car is well under 40 tonnes.
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