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the NKP Berkshires did not have a booster engine in the trailing truck, yet the there is about an 8" difference between the rear wheels (44" diameter) and the front wheels (36" dia) on the trailing truck.  looking at the drawing, i've got to believe it is necessary to clear the ashpan which slopes downward from the rear of the firebox.

 

in this case the model is actually following the prototype.

Originally Posted by overlandflyer:

...i've got to believe it is necessary to clear the ashpan which slopes downward from the rear of the firebox.

Bingo...give that man a cigar. Ash pan clearances were the reason and you can clearly see that in the broadside shot posted above. It has nothing to do with a booster engine.

 

Weight is another reason. Each of those axles carries just over 61,000 pounds.

Last edited by Rich Melvin
Originally Posted by OGR Webmaster:
Originally Posted by overlandflyer:

...i've got to believe it is necessary to clear the ashpan which slopes downward from the rear of the firebox.

Bingo...give that man a cigar. Ash pan clearances were the reason and you can clearly see that in the broadside shot posted above. It has nothing to do with a booster engine.

 

Weight is another reason. Each of those axles carries just over 61,000 pounds.

No fair.  I didn't know we were playing Bingo!  Actually I think  I should get 1/2 credit for the answer booster engine.  Applying power to a smaller diameter wheel doesn't make good mechanical sense.  Hence a larger wheel.

 

Well maybe 25% 

 

Larry

Originally Posted by jaygee:

Do we have any Berks with same diameter trailer wheels?  Or any four wheel trailing trucks of this nature?   Sure do!  There may be times when a smaller front axle/wheel set is called for, but I don't think it's set in stone.  This should turn into a most interesting thread !

There were two Berks with the same diameter trailer wheels, Santa Fe class 4101, and L&N class M-1.

 

As for other wheel arrangements there were many examples in every design with trailer wheels of the same size.

 

Stuart

 

i'm sure some design decisions will never be 100% understood.  for example, ok, the front wheel on the NKP Berk trailing truck is 36", but so is the front truck wheelset.  why not make both rear wheels 36" and have one less wheel to keep in inventory.  perhaps 44" wheels were already in stock from a previously discontinued design.  perhaps the larger rear wheel added better traction to the truck.  ... or maybe it just looked better.  some people will consider it fun to analyze to death, though.

 

cheers...gary

Last edited by overlandflyer
Originally Posted by overlandflyer:

i'm sure some design decisions will never be 100% understood.  for example, ok, the front wheel on the NKP Berk trailing truck is 36", but so is the front truck wheelset.  why not make both rear wheels 36" and have one less wheel to keep in inventory.  perhaps 44" wheels were already in stock from a previously discontinued design.  perhaps the larger rear wheel added better traction to the truck.  ... or maybe it just looked better.  some people will consider it fun to analyze to death, though.

 

cheers...gary

I don't think Lima, Baldwin or Alco had wheels "in stock" waiting to be pulled from the shelf for the next locomotive order.   Raw material maybe, or things like wheels for the trucks from an outside supplier.

 

How much traction does a trailing truck provide, anyway?

 

Then there's always the C&O Allegheny, which had two pairs of 36" wheels and one pair of 43" wheels in its training truck...

 

Rusty

Originally Posted by Rusty Traque:
Originally Posted by overlandflyer:

...  some people will consider it fun to analyze to death, though.

 

I don't think Lima, Baldwin or Alco had wheels "in stock" waiting to be pulled from the shelf for the next locomotive order.   Raw material maybe, or things like wheels for the trucks from an outside supplier.

 

How much traction does a trailing truck provide, anyway?

 

Then there's always the C&O Allegheny, which had two pairs of 36" wheels and one pair of 43" wheels in its training truck...

 

Rusty

 

Originally Posted by overlandflyer:

....  perhaps the larger rear wheel added better traction to the truck.  ...

 

Originally Posted by Dominic Mazoch:

A training truck does NOT give traction if a.) it does not have a booster, and b). the booster has to be ON!

if you had read and understood my reply, i was referring to the traction of the trailing truck itself.  traction is merely the grip of the tires to the rails which would obviously be effected by weight.  you are confusing traction with tractive effort or tractive force which is a completely different thing.

While on a visit to the Owosso shop about 2010, the trailing truck for the 1225 was out from under the engine and was apart.  I was surprised to see that the big axle (43" wheels) had a large gear pressed on it from when it was built at Lima in 1941.  Obviously it was intended for the day that a booster engine was added to the 1225's trailing truck but as I have gathered - that never happened?  I assume that it is still that way as she returns to service.

 

The PM 1225 is also an Advisory Mechanical Committee locomotive, same as the NKP Berks and the C&O 2-6-6-6.  Just last month a former NKP machinist passed away.  Howard Lewis, 93, of the Cleveland area was assigned to the Lima Locomotive Works for 4 months in 1942 to help assist with the inspection of new AMC  locomotives which included PM, NKP and C&O steam locomotives.  He helped inspect the second order of C&O 2-6-6-6 locomotives and as the "low man" on the team he did not understand until over 60 years later why they had him weighing all sorts of parts on the Allegheny order but not on the other locomotives.  It was of course the fact that the first order was horrendously overweight.  Howard was interviewed in October for the new WBGU Television (Bowling Green, Ohio, State University) documentary on the Lima Locomotive Works.  The following day he was stricken and went to the hospital, not to recover. 

I'm going to venture a guess here....and that's this.  Could it be that some mechanical officers and designers may have thought in the early years of four wheel trailer development, that a smaller lead wheel/axle might better guide the truck along, especially entering curves at speed?  IIRC, the original applicants of these trucks; AT&SF 2-10-2(4) and Lima 2-8-4s were low speed machines. First high speed app. I'm aware of would be first 4-8-4 or 4-6-4s, a bit later.  The large wheels on the booster axle makes sense when you consider the machinery needing to be installed on it.

Originally Posted by OGR Webmaster:
Ash pan clearances were the reason and you can clearly see that in the broadside shot posted above. It has nothing to do with a booster engine.

Good grief! What part of this explanation did you not understand?

It has nothing to do with what wheels were in stock, booster engines, smaller wheels guiding the truck or anything else. LOOK AT THE PICTURE!


The reason a 4-wheel trailing truck came to be in the first place was the Lima "Super Power" design. They enlarged the firebox (not the boiler) beyond what the Mikados (2-8-2 wheel arrangement) of the era had, in order to build in more steaming capacity. That necessitated another axle back there to carry the weight. Thus was born the 2-8-4.

 

The design of the larger firebox/ash pan combination required two different diameter wheels on the trailing truck to clear the ash pan and carry the weight.

 

That's it. It wasn't complicated.

Last edited by Rich Melvin
Originally Posted by OGR Webmaster:
Originally Posted by OGR Webmaster:
Ash pan clearances were the reason and you can clearly see that in the broadside shot posted above. It has nothing to do with a booster engine.

Good grief! What part of this explanation did you not understand?

It has nothing to do with what wheels were in stock, booster engines, smaller wheels guiding the truck or anything else. LOOK AT THE PICTURE!

EDIT: Removed the pic to save space.

I do not get it...

...could you provide 27 - 8×10 color glossy pictures with circles and arrows and a paragraph on the back of each one explaining what each one was used for?

<snicker>

 

Last edited by Bryan Smith
Originally Posted by lehighline:

Dave,

 

Pacifics have a 4-6-2 wheel arrangement, meaning only a single axle beneath the firebox. If yours has wheels of different sizes on the last axle, then I would return the engine to MTH for repair! 

 

Chris

LVHR

Of course it is Chris, my mind must be going. Now I have to look for the loco I have with the different wheels. It was what came to my mind.

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