Why does Amtrak not go to C (6-wheel trucks) instead of B (4-wheel trucks)? They would have better grip and extend time on the marker reader time? Pluss being easier on the rails themselves?
What about the Auto-trains? Sometimes they are 40+ cars long.Freight railroads have 6 axles, but they need the weight and traction power. When your pulling 125 freight cars it takes a bit more to start and keep them rolling. Four axles are plenty fine for a passenger train. Amtrak does not even use AC power traction motors for its trains because the train can get up to speed long before the DC motor gets hot enough to cause a issue.
The new Chargers are AC as well.I might disagree about AC traction, since just about anything new is AC traction, even some older stuff was rebuilt AC (some AEM-7) and P32DM are AC. There are too many advantages in AC motor technology to stay with DC. Even new freight is going AC.
Not all freight is AC. The price point is dropping, but at one point people were point out how many replacements DC motors you could buy for the difference in the cost of a AC locomotive.I might disagree about AC traction, since just about anything new is AC traction, even some older stuff was rebuilt AC (some AEM-7) and P32DM are AC. There are too many advantages in AC motor technology to stay with DC. Even new freight is going AC.
The OP was asking about 3 axle trucks and those are just not need in the passenger hauling business. Although I am sure you could find a train somewhere that use it.
The OP was asking about 3 axle trucks and those are just not need in the passenger hauling business. Although I am sure you could find a train somewhere that use it.
Alaska RR also has a few SD45's in use too. All 6-wheel trucks.The Alaska Railroad has been using SD70MACs in passenger service for more than 20 years.
But that wasn't because they needed 6-axle passenger power, a simple matter of ordering only one new model of power. The essential point made earlier in the thread --- that you use 6 axles when you need extra tractive effort to pull heavy trains up grades, and don't need them in passenger service -- remains true.
Good looking motor, unable to do the higher speeds needed, add on bonus does not return braking energy to the system. Out dated technology.*Looking at the avatar of Just-Thinking-51*
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