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Re: Refurbed HSTs. A folly?

Posted: Wed May 11, 2022 10:15 am
by Hatfield Shed
A little harsh on the locomotive application of the steam turbine? The Swedish Railways made a success of them, largely due to the presence there of F. Ljungstrom, who was a world class engineer and contributed much to general steam turbine plant development, in addition to significant work in other fields. It was this that led the LMS to give the steam turbine loco a whirl; but lacking the supporting industrial infrastructure that was available in Sweden, maintenance was the weakness.

Re: Refurbed HSTs. A folly?

Posted: Wed May 11, 2022 10:44 am
by Mickey
Hatfield Shed wrote: Wed May 11, 2022 10:15 am It was this that led the LMS to give the steam turbine loco a whirl; but lacking the supporting industrial infrastructure that was available in Sweden, maintenance was the weakness.
Sorry to go way off the topic but that LMS steam turbine-driven loco looked impressive as all LMS steam express passenger locos did but without the need for outside valve gear on the driving wheels it looked rather odd (to me) I thought?. Anyway, the loco was involved in the Harrow crash of 1952 and was scrapped.

Getting back on topic I suppose the HSTs had their following amongst railway enthusiasts and trainspotters but I can't say I was all that struck on them although I thought they looked better in their original mid-1970s British Rail livery rather than their 1990s/2000s livery.

Re: Refurbed HSTs. A folly?

Posted: Wed May 11, 2022 11:32 am
by Hatfield Shed
The HST worked and the ride was decent. Looked their smartest in the all over GNER blue in my opinion: but I never rode them in that form because we had the excellent '225' 91+mk4 electric sets by then. Possibly the last good express passenger train equipment for the UK, all downhill from now onwards with very utilitarian equipment to rattle you swiftly between London and Edinburgh. (I realise there are other UK routes, but only one is truly significant.)

Re: Refurbed HSTs. A folly?

Posted: Wed May 11, 2022 1:29 pm
by rockinjohn
Ref: the "Downunder"HST retitled "XPT" quite a lot of mods.were made before entering service in 1982 (approx).engine downrated/extra cooling &air filters for obvious reasons, boogies were "tuned" for @ the time, (maybe now also) to cope with v. indifferent track conditions, quite reliable in the main or maybe they just didn't announce the failures! &reaching 2000 before the newer as fitted in the UK also, improved Paxman Engine.With the comments on Gas Turbines, I think the main reason for not being adopted in the UK was that the turbines needed to run on full power for fair distances, their true worth appearing on the long drags to be worthwhile, Union Pacific in the USA worked theirs quite hard with little trouble for many years with progressive runs of loco build,I suppose our Lickey/Shap or Dainton banks just not long enough& not needing to change locos to benefit from a fleet of gas turbines.

Re: Refurbed HSTs. A folly?

Posted: Wed May 11, 2022 2:54 pm
by Hatfield Shed
rockinjohn wrote: Wed May 11, 2022 1:29 pm ...With the comments on Gas Turbines, I think the main reason for not being adopted in the UK was that the turbines needed to run on full power for fair distances, their true worth appearing on the long drags to be worthwhile, Union Pacific in the USA worked theirs quite hard with little trouble for many years with progressive runs of loco build,I suppose our Lickey/Shap or Dainton banks just not long enough& not needing to change locos to benefit from a fleet of gas turbines.
Nail, Head, Hit. Early gas turbines were not very fuel efficient, and only found their way onto fast combat aircraft for the performance advantage over piston-prop. The problem was that the lowest throttle setting at which the early engines would keep running still yielded near 50% of full power. (There's a wondrous story of Chuck Yeager overcoming the resulting 'it won't slow down' problem on the first test flight of the B47, on which Boeing's design staff had omitted to fit drag brakes.)

The two GW originated gas turbine locos burned away their power turbine blades, casings and exhausts because insufficient energy was being extracted for propulsion purposes which would have cooled the gas stream and thus prolonged hot component life. Had the GW had a thermodynamicist in their employ, she might have suggested setting the train brakes to drag on level and nearly so route sections which would have eased the problem by requiring more power from the GT locos. Cast iron brake blocks would be cheaper and ubiquitously available to the fitters, as compared to the late 1940's unobtainium used in the GT components, and the few specialised staff to fit the parts...

Re: Refurbed HSTs. A folly?

Posted: Wed May 11, 2022 8:11 pm
by richard
Okay - I hadn't heard of Ljungstom. Looked those locos up. No condensor?

As for gas turbines, I also skipped the UP engines - on the face of it another success: 50+ locos built and operated for 22 years. However, their fuel consumption was roughly double compared to similar contemporary consists. Not exactly a big success!

Re: Refurbed HSTs. A folly?

Posted: Wed May 11, 2022 10:57 pm
by Hatfield Shed
richard wrote: Wed May 11, 2022 8:11 pm Okay - I hadn't heard of Ljungstom. Looked those locos up. No condensor?

As for gas turbines, I also skipped the UP engines - on the face of it another success: 50+ locos built and operated for 22 years. However, their fuel consumption was roughly double compared to similar contemporary consists. Not exactly a big success!
Fitting a condensor to a steam loco was difficult due to bulk. TTBoMK only in South Africa was this successfully employed on otherwise conventional steam locos for water recovery, toward the end of steam power.

The UP gas turbines were a useful idea when designed. More thermally efficient than UP's big coal fired steamers - well that wasn't diffcult! - but well below diesel performance. However the GT loco benefitted from the much higher specific power of a gas turbine compared to the other two, resulting in more power output per unit weight in the complete loco; and then the killer advantage, it burned near worthless 'Bunker' fuel which (vile stuff) was a waste product of contemporary oil refining, so the energy consumed came at a much lower unit cost then diesel fuel. However this advantage was progressively eroded by the invention and ongoing development of catalytic cracking, which enabled refineries to break the large molecules in what had previously been waste product into lighter fractions which were saleable and in high demand. and that killed the low energy cost advantage.

Oh well, seemed like a good idea when proposed...

Re: Refurbed HSTs. A folly?

Posted: Thu May 12, 2022 8:26 am
by sandwhich
It would seem that Great Western who made a big thing out of the use of refurbed HSTs are looking for a way out of using them because of increasing maintenance costs with "surplus" IEP units becoming available to replace some where possible. They admit it is a plan to gradually replace them but not overnight. There will be a surplus of 47 Class 221/222 units which be coming off lease from West Coast and East Midlands in the next couple of years, some will go to Cross Country which will no doubt see off their small fleet of HSTs, could the rest go to Scotland, only time will tell.

Re: Refurbed HSTs. A folly?

Posted: Thu May 12, 2022 9:50 am
by Hatfield Shed
Not too surprising in the wake of the RAIB report on the fatal derailment at Carmont (Stonehaven) in 2020.Quietly damning of the mk3's crashworthiness against current standards, it reads to me as 'check the fleet for these deficiencies, and condemn them'.

Re: Refurbed HSTs. A folly?

Posted: Thu May 12, 2022 6:20 pm
by sandwhich
I give 3-4 years for the franchised leased HSTs to become history.

Re: Refurbed HSTs. A folly?

Posted: Sun Dec 04, 2022 7:36 pm
by sandwhich
Its now been confirmed that Great Western are planning to take off lease their refurbished HSTs by December 2023 because of increasing costs and replace them with more intensive use of IEPs and possibly a few more 158s some possibly coming from Wales. The last report from Scotrail was they are using just 15 units instead of 25, okay they may well squeeze out some more in future timetables but they must be facing the same increasing costs problem as GW. They have done their service and more than paid their way and I am still of the opinion that they will be gone within a few years.

Re: Refurbed HSTs. A folly?

Posted: Sun Dec 04, 2022 7:58 pm
by Hatfield Shed
We can revive the idea of building your country retreat economically, by parallel mounting two mk3's on four concrete pedestals at the constructor's choice of spacing, adding end walls and throwing a roof over the top, and then fitting out the resulting covered space to suit. I am naming mine 'Home Sweet Tenement'. Don't think it will appear in 'Grand Designs'...

Re: Refurbed HSTs. A folly?

Posted: Tue Dec 06, 2022 11:55 am
by Mickey
Back on the 'flying bananas' again.

I suppose after appearing during the mid-1970s on British Rail I suppose they have a 'nostalgic interest' to some and they also appeared to be 'smooth riders' in traffic.

Re: Refurbed HSTs. A folly?

Posted: Wed Dec 07, 2022 6:25 pm
by 65447
At least the 125s had decent and comfortable seats, which is more than can be said for the Mk4 coaching stock and definitely the modern thin towel on a plastic shell type seating forced on us by hapless civil servants.

Re: Refurbed HSTs. A folly?

Posted: Fri Dec 09, 2022 11:45 am
by Mickey
Back in the mid 1970s I was never much of a HST fan after taking over from the class 55 Deltics on the ECML during the late 1970s but from a nostalgic point of view nearly 50 years on I suppose they weren't that bad after all and possibly better than what came later on in the 1990s and 2000s.