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#1
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Mark Brader:
The book includes a long footnote which says, among other things, that the first use of the Ganz system in commercial service was on the Valtellina line near Lake Como in September 1902; and that technical details of the system and an illustration of a Valtellina line locomotive can be found in "History of the Electric Locomotive" (1969) by F.J.G. Haut. Looking around on the Web for photos showing such a locomotive, I only find this one, although it's on several web pages: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Ka...an_mozdony.jpg So I suspect it's the same one as in Haut's book. Anyway, the interesting thing is the collector that contacts the overhead wires, which looks more like a big bow collector than anything else -- one collector contacting both wires. Obviously there must have two separate contacts on that horizontal bar, with insulation between them. Also note how high the arm is above the locomotive. You'd never fit that thing into a Metropolitan or District tunnel. They must have had a different sort of collector in mind. This page shows that photo and a couple of other ones of the Ganz 3-phase system, before moving on to related subjects. They all appear to have those high collectors. http://erojr.home.cern.ch/erojr/cont...pe/kanprot.htm -- Mark Brader, Toronto | "What Europe needs is a fresh, unused mind." | -- Foreign Correspondent My text in this article is in the public domain. |
#2
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On Oct 26, 11:22*pm, (Mark Brader) wrote:
one collector contacting both wires. *Obviously there must have two separate contacts on that horizontal bar, with insulation between them. Also note how high the arm is above the locomotive. *You'd never fit that thing into a Metropolitan or District tunnel. *They must have had a different sort of collector in mind. I've never really looked into the three phase ideas of the Met but I'd always thought they were looking at the three phase "two wire" system (i.e. three phases of two conductors and one running rail return) not with overhead wires but rails, with lower supply voltage than Ganz. Conductor rails something like the centre and outer rail (like todays DC) would be the equivalent to Ganz two wires, and the running rails the return in the same way as Ganz. That way you don't need to expand tunnels. My interpretation of "not suitable for tunnels" was not something about not enough wire clearances but one of having all track rails in a three phase system at a voltage too high for exposed ground level conductors. Like I said its not something I looked into, so maybe I misunderstood the whole thing. If you really wanted to run three phase for the tubes I suggest you simply use a side contract pickup for all three phases - its complex at points and crossings but providing one car of the set is in contact you still have power, and thats no different to a lot of DC section gaps on todays tube. -- Nick |
#3
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Mark Brader:
Also note how high the arm is above the locomotive. You'd never fit that thing into a Metropolitan or District tunnel. They must have had a different sort of collector in mind. "Nick": I've never really looked into the three phase ideas of the Met but I'd always thought they were looking at the three phase "two wire" system ...not with overhead wires but rails, with lower supply voltage than Ganz. As I indicated in my previous posting, "A History of London Transport" is quite explicit that it was Ganz and overhead wires. -- Mark Brader, Toronto | "Something doesn't become ethical just because | you can get away with it." --Barry Margolin |
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