Union Pacific 3985 or UP 3985 is a four-cylinder simple articulated 4-6-6-4 Challenger-type steam locomotive owned by Union Pacific Railroad. The UP 3985 locomotive was built in 1943 by the American Locomotive Company of Schenectady, New York. It is currently the largest operational steam locomotive in the world.
Articulated means that the front set driving wheels can pivot for rounding curves.
4-6-6-4 refers to the wheels under the engine: 4 under the forward or pilot truck, 6 refers to the 6 forward drivers, 6 refers to the rear drivers and 4 under the trailing truck that supports the firebox and cab. Only the drivers are powered as their name implies. And it came out of Schenectady, just like our Jetcone! Unlike our Jetcone, the locomotive and its tender weigh over a million pounds. While this one burns oil now to help eliminate the hot cinders that can start brush fires, when burning coal they could consume close to an amazing 20 tons of coal an hour, depending on the load and the grade.
This is one of my favorite videos. I think most here enjoy watching machinery work and this is amazing: fire, smoke, water, steam & motion. Those of us who appreciate and admire these engines feel that, when running, they are as close to a living thing as any piece of machinery can be. Watch the pistons power the connecting rods to the driving wheels and just above them the valve gear that ticks back and forth to synchronize the valves with the pistons. Just after 4:20 you can see steam start to escape just forward of the huge piston powering the rear drivers on the left side, then at 4:30 you can see water pour out of the overflow for the water feed system that replenishes water in the boiler from the tender. All of this machinery was what it took to transfer energy from fire to steam to reciprocal motion in the pistons to rotary motion in the wheels. Watching it move at high speed you have to wonder how it can stand up to the stress without flying apart, but it does. Diesel electric locomotives simplified all of this by using electricity to transform the rotation of a generator to the traction motors powering the wheels of the train engine. You can Google steam locomotive parts for definitions & drawings of any terms I have used.
The shape of classic oscillating agitator washer transmissions is the way it is because inside, rotary motion from the motor has to be transformed into back and forth motion, sort of the reverse of the locomotive's task.
The haunting sound of the steam whistle is sweet but spine-chilling music compared to the sound of the air horns on a modern locomotive.
I hope you will enjoy this video.
Articulated means that the front set driving wheels can pivot for rounding curves.
4-6-6-4 refers to the wheels under the engine: 4 under the forward or pilot truck, 6 refers to the 6 forward drivers, 6 refers to the rear drivers and 4 under the trailing truck that supports the firebox and cab. Only the drivers are powered as their name implies. And it came out of Schenectady, just like our Jetcone! Unlike our Jetcone, the locomotive and its tender weigh over a million pounds. While this one burns oil now to help eliminate the hot cinders that can start brush fires, when burning coal they could consume close to an amazing 20 tons of coal an hour, depending on the load and the grade.
This is one of my favorite videos. I think most here enjoy watching machinery work and this is amazing: fire, smoke, water, steam & motion. Those of us who appreciate and admire these engines feel that, when running, they are as close to a living thing as any piece of machinery can be. Watch the pistons power the connecting rods to the driving wheels and just above them the valve gear that ticks back and forth to synchronize the valves with the pistons. Just after 4:20 you can see steam start to escape just forward of the huge piston powering the rear drivers on the left side, then at 4:30 you can see water pour out of the overflow for the water feed system that replenishes water in the boiler from the tender. All of this machinery was what it took to transfer energy from fire to steam to reciprocal motion in the pistons to rotary motion in the wheels. Watching it move at high speed you have to wonder how it can stand up to the stress without flying apart, but it does. Diesel electric locomotives simplified all of this by using electricity to transform the rotation of a generator to the traction motors powering the wheels of the train engine. You can Google steam locomotive parts for definitions & drawings of any terms I have used.
The shape of classic oscillating agitator washer transmissions is the way it is because inside, rotary motion from the motor has to be transformed into back and forth motion, sort of the reverse of the locomotive's task.
The haunting sound of the steam whistle is sweet but spine-chilling music compared to the sound of the air horns on a modern locomotive.
I hope you will enjoy this video.