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USATC 2-8-0 No. 611
http://rypn.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=27687
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Author:  Dick_Morris [ Sun Jan 05, 2014 7:39 am ]
Post subject:  Re: USATC 2-8-0 No. 611

I remember that there was a questions on when 611 was converted to poppet gear but didn't have time to see if it was asked in this thread. When searching for tech data needed on our restoration of Alaska Railroad USATC S-160 #557 I stumbled across a group of entries on photos held by the Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania. If you enter the search "U.S. Army AND Vulcan" at http://rrmuseumpa.andornot.com/Archives/ you will get about 20 hits for a 2-8-0, with one of the descriptions being -

Railroad or Entity: U.S. Army
Country: United States
Builder: Vulcan
Description: Reconditioned for U.S. Army
Date: 1949
Assigned Num Name: 2628
Wheel Arrangement:2-8-0

Unfortunately, they don't have the scanned thumbnails on line for this group of photos. Based on the comment that the locomotive was reconditioned and the number of photos, I suspect that Vulcan may have done the conversion to poppet valve gear and that this group of photos documents the conversion.

There is also an entry for a technical drawing for a U.S. Army 2-8-0 by Lima with poppet valve. It's probably also of 611.

Author:  whodom [ Sun Jan 05, 2014 2:57 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: USATC 2-8-0 No. 611

Thanks for the info, Dick. I might need to send a few dollars up to Strasburg.

Author:  QJdriver [ Sun May 17, 2015 10:24 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: USATC 2-8-0 No. 611

I would never claim to understand anything about poppet valves or their patents, so please forgive me for asking a simpleton type question: WHO IN THE NAME OF HELL DID ALL THE DIRTY WORK ON THIS ENGINE ???

If anybody read my post in biggest basket cases reborn, while I may have mixed up my engine numbers, I was most definitely talking about the 611 when I described getting it ready to leave Texas. Seeing the picture taken in 2013 in Maryland, it is beyond miraculous that they could have cleaned up this nasty of a wrecked engine to look this decent !!! IT MAKES ME PROUD TO BE AN AMERICAN.

In all seriousness, I would dearly love to hear about what they went through just getting to the point they have, what processes they used, how many men for how many shifts, for how many months (years is more like it), for how much money ??? If it was done by volunteers, their names ought to be remembered in the history of preservation along with BOB ANDERSON, who rebuilt the Rogers K class in New Zealand, even if 611 never runs again.

You notice I'm now saying IF 611 never runs again. These guys have the worst of it behind them, I do believe.

VIVA USATC 611 !!!!

Author:  J3a-614 [ Sun Aug 11, 2019 9:31 am ]
Post subject:  Re: USATC 2-8-0 No. 611

The recent thread on surviving Lake Superior & Ishpeming steam, and its reference to No. 34's original tender, tickled these brain cells and got me curious about this engine.

Is there any further news or commentary on the progress of its restoration since it was last discussed back in 2015?

Author:  choodude [ Thu Aug 15, 2019 9:54 am ]
Post subject:  Re: USATC 2-8-0 No. 611

J3a-614 wrote:
The recent thread on surviving Lake Superior & Ishpeming steam, and its reference to No. 34's original tender, tickled these brain cells and got me curious about this engine.

Is there any further news or commentary on the progress of its restoration since it was last discussed back in 2015?



Back in December 2014 the T1 Trust folks got together with the Bill Miller Equipment Sales folks who agreed to allow the T1 Trust to examine and reverse engineer the valve gear.

If you scroll down this web page to the 12-23-14 entry you can read the write up:

https://prrt1steamlocomotivetrust.org/news.php

The T1 Trust agreed to share the drawings and CAD files they were going to make.

Brian

Author:  xboxtravis7992 [ Fri Aug 16, 2019 10:03 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: USATC 2-8-0 No. 611

Dick_Morris wrote:
I remember that there was a questions on when 611 was converted to poppet gear but didn't have time to see if it was asked in this thread. When searching for tech data needed on our restoration of Alaska Railroad USATC S-160 #557 I stumbled across a group of entries on photos held by the Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania. If you enter the search "U.S. Army AND Vulcan" at http://rrmuseumpa.andornot.com/Archives/ you will get about 20 hits for a 2-8-0, with one of the descriptions being -

Railroad or Entity: U.S. Army
Country: United States
Builder: Vulcan
Description: Reconditioned for U.S. Army
Date: 1949
Assigned Num Name: 2628
Wheel Arrangement:2-8-0

Unfortunately, they don't have the scanned thumbnails on line for this group of photos. Based on the comment that the locomotive was reconditioned and the number of photos, I suspect that Vulcan may have done the conversion to poppet valve gear and that this group of photos documents the conversion.

There is also an entry for a technical drawing for a U.S. Army 2-8-0 by Lima with poppet valve. It's probably also of 611.


Interesting. I watched an episode of the digital series Steam Locomotives in Profile focused on the UASATC S160's, and it mentioned there all of the S160's were built with Walschaerts valve gear. The change to poppet is fascinating to say the least.

Author:  J3a-614 [ Tue Jan 21, 2020 4:39 am ]
Post subject:  Re: USATC 2-8-0 No. 611

Just something for the files on this old thread--an in service shot of the engine that showed up on Facebook recently.

https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid ... ater&ifg=1

https://scontent-iad3-1.xx.fbcdn.net/v/ ... e=5E913470

Image

Author:  p51 [ Tue Jan 21, 2020 4:59 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: USATC 2-8-0 No. 611

Fort Eustis was a haven for train fans into the 60s as the Army was still teaching steam operations and running their WW2 locomotives around the post.
Much like the Jeeps and GMC 2.5 ton trucks, the S-160s were designed for a relatively short service life. Nobody told that to the running examples (like my 1944 Willys Jeep in the garage which still runs but has never been restored), and these locomotives were made in the same spirit.
Three of them did a triple-header trip on the Ft Eustis RR for the 1963 NRHS convention, one of the last hurrahs for Army steam.

Attachments:
Ft Eustis RR 1963 NRHS convention.jpg
Ft Eustis RR 1963 NRHS convention.jpg [ 82.31 KiB | Viewed 6321 times ]

Author:  Alan Walker [ Tue Jan 21, 2020 6:01 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: USATC 2-8-0 No. 611

The locomotive was passed around by organizations that either did not have the funds or the desire to restore the locomotive. As for the valve gear (if that is the dirty work alluded to), that was most likely done by the United States Army Transportation Corp. The only purpose for the locomotives was essentially to train corpsmen on how to rebuild and operate locomotives that they would encounter if we ever had another armed conflict in post-WWII Europe. Capriotti valve gear was common on European locomotives and the USATC's operational requirements dictated that they be able to fix any locomotives or rolling stock that they encountered in the field.

The other point is that anything can be fixed if you have enough money. The question that the other organizations answered honestly was should they expend funds to fix the locomotive? For the other organizations, the correct answer turned out to be no. Either the cost was beyond their means or the locomotive did not fit their collection policy. I was at TVRM when the 611 was there and we made the correct decision not to spend time or money on the locomotive-we had other projects that were much more important than that.

Author:  Overmod [ Wed Jan 22, 2020 1:23 am ]
Post subject:  Re: USATC 2-8-0 No. 611

The stated purpose (as I recall it) for the Vulcan conversion 'kits' was to modify the locomotives so they could be effectively driven by soldiers who did not know or had not been trained in effective steam-locomotive operation (i.e., coordination of throttle and cutoff). Thw whole point of 'Franklin type D' is to automate the effective change in cutoff as the engine accelerates in a manner comparable to notching up -- but it does it, effectively, by wiredrawing the steam flow as rotational speed increases.

That made it practical to provide a single forward/reverse control implemented with a couple of ordinary valves of the kind you might find on an air lift. It's an interesting system.

Part of the 'fun' involved with parts is that the drive system apparently makes use of conventional 6x6 driveline parts, universals and torque tubes and such.

I have never been able to find out how many of the 'kits' were actually made by Vulcan. That information may well be somewhere in the surviving records.

Author:  whodom [ Mon Jan 31, 2022 12:00 am ]
Post subject:  Re: USATC 2-8-0 No. 611

In the tradition of resurrecting long-idle threads on this forum, I thought I'd post some interesting info I stumbled across regarding USATC 611 and its poppet valve installation.

The following comes from the late Bill Withuhn's last book, "American Steam Locomotives: Design and Development, 1880-1960" published in 2019.

On page 383:

"There was one last valve-gear project. The U.S. Army responded favorably to a Franklin proposal to develop a simplified gear for use in military locomotives. The design was (Franklin Engineer) Delano's brainchild. The rotary cam had only three positions: forward, neutral and reverse. Cutoff in forward and reverse was fixed. Carefully restricted inlet ports produced an effect similar to reduced cutoff at higher locomotive speed. As steam flow increased with increasing rpm, the fixed-inlet restriction limited the quantity of steam consumed. One of the military 2-8-0's at Fort Eustis, VA was modified with the new "Type B-1" gear. The gear proved highly reliable, with steam economy similar to conventional piston valves. According to Delano, the Army mechanics at Fort Eustis deemed the B-1 gear easier to repair and adjust than conventional valves. "Valve setting"- the normally elaborate procedure of aligning valves and valve gear to produce the same cylinder power on both sides of the piston at different cutoffs- was reduced to a couple of minutes of checking cam installation; most repairs involved a quick and simple exchange of parts.

There would be no repeat orders from the Army or from any railroad."

Withuhn's description of the gear's method of limiting steam use is not precisely accurate, but he gets the gist of the idea. At any rate, apparently it had steam economy similar to a locomotive with conventional valve gear and piston valves, while it was easier to operate as well as repair and maintain. That at least gives us a good idea of how successful this arrangement was.

By the way, I stumbled across this information while re-reading the section on Franklin's work to develop poppet valves for U.S. applications. Earlier in the chapter Withuhn covers efforts by Franklin to determine the cause of persistent valve breakage problems with the T-1's. While riding regular passenger trains "undercover" on the Pennsy pulled by T-1's, Franklin personnel actually documented several runs with sustained top speeds of over 140 MPH. Senior Franklin personnel reviewed the documentation and considered it reliable.

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