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#21
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On Thu, 23 Jul 2009 11:19:39 +0100, "Recliner"
wrote: "Peter Masson" wrote in message "Recliner" wrote Surely there were large numbers of 1959 and 1962 stock trains in service by then? Admittedly, their design was pretty similar to the 1938s, so they may not have seen much newer. They did, and the 1959 stock were the first 'silver' trains - but they did not run on the lines used by the previous poster at the time. Weren't there silver R stock trains before then? 1949 IIRC - apparently they dismantled one after they were withdrawn and the body was reckoned to still have a few more years left in it. |
#22
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1506 wrote:
On Jul 22, 1:08 pm, Stephen Furley wrote: On 22/7/09 16:00, in article , "Paul Corfield" wrote: An internal (LU) notice has stated that the first passenger service journey of the new Victoria Line 09 stock took place last night just before midnight from Seven Sisters down to Brixton. More passenger service trips will build up over the coming months using trains 01 and 02. I thought people might be interested to know. -- Paul Corfield via Google The Victoria Line stock was the first new stock that I remember being introduced. It seemed incredibly modern at the time compared to the CO and R stocks which I was used to on the Circle and District when going to the Science Museum, the first journey up into central London which I made on my own, and the 38 stock which I occasionally used on the Bakerloo or Northern; these were the only Underground lines which I'd used at that time. It's odd to think that it's reached the end of its life, and due to be replaced. That is my memory of the London Subway also. In the Early 1960s the tubes were, by and large served by 1938, and earlier stock. The sub- surface lines were CO and R stock served. The Victoria Line trains and the A stock on the Met. seemed SO modern. God, your making me feel my age, I can remember the 'Q' stock on the District, the 'T' & 'F' stock on the Met & the pre-1938 on the Central & Pic. I can also remember the loco hauled stock on the Met. -- Tony Dragon |
#23
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On Thu, 23 Jul 2009, Recliner wrote:
"Tom Anderson" wrote in message rth.li On Thu, 23 Jul 2009, Peter Masson wrote: "Tom Barry" wrote If they'd only had aircon... Among the problems with aircon on the tube lines is - where do you dump the heat? Presumably on, say, the Central or Piccadilly lines it would be possible to devise a system whereby the heat was retained on the train until it got to the open air, and then dumped, but Victoria Line trains stay underground all the time they are in service. No use cooling the trains if you just heat the tunnels even more. You'd have to install a fake open air. By which i mean some point on the line where trains could stop and offload their heat - some apparatus they sit inside which blows a gale of super-cooled damp air (or even water) into their heat exchangers, and sucks the warmed exhaust out again. You wouldn't want to do it in passenger service, but if you could build ten minutes into the schedule at one end, it could be done during turn-around. Admittedly, this would involve changing the Victoria operating principle quite a bit, but at least it's technically feasible. Ish. I think it makes a lot more sense to just take more heat out of the stations and maybe the tunnels as well. That means more surface ventilation fans running (which is think is already happening) and some sort of additional cooling, such as the plan to use heat exchangers with the cold ground water being pumped out. That way, the passengers in the stations benefit as well, and you don't need to complicate the already cramped trains any more than they are already. But you don't cool the interiors of the trains as much as you would with on-board AC. I don't doubt that a station cooling approach gets a better degrees-per-pound ratio, averaged over the whole underground space at least, and so is a more sensible option. But i do wonder if there aren't workable ways to get the insides of the trains cooler than is achievable that way. tom -- When I see a man on a bicycle I have hope for the human race. -- H. G. Wells |
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Tom Anderson wrote:
-- When I see a man on a bicycle I have hope for the human race. -- H. G. Wells H.G - meet Doug. |
#25
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"Tom Anderson" wrote in message
th.li On Thu, 23 Jul 2009, Recliner wrote: "Tom Anderson" wrote in message rth.li On Thu, 23 Jul 2009, Peter Masson wrote: "Tom Barry" wrote If they'd only had aircon... Among the problems with aircon on the tube lines is - where do you dump the heat? Presumably on, say, the Central or Piccadilly lines it would be possible to devise a system whereby the heat was retained on the train until it got to the open air, and then dumped, but Victoria Line trains stay underground all the time they are in service. No use cooling the trains if you just heat the tunnels even more. You'd have to install a fake open air. By which i mean some point on the line where trains could stop and offload their heat - some apparatus they sit inside which blows a gale of super-cooled damp air (or even water) into their heat exchangers, and sucks the warmed exhaust out again. You wouldn't want to do it in passenger service, but if you could build ten minutes into the schedule at one end, it could be done during turn-around. Admittedly, this would involve changing the Victoria operating principle quite a bit, but at least it's technically feasible. Ish. I think it makes a lot more sense to just take more heat out of the stations and maybe the tunnels as well. That means more surface ventilation fans running (which is think is already happening) and some sort of additional cooling, such as the plan to use heat exchangers with the cold ground water being pumped out. That way, the passengers in the stations benefit as well, and you don't need to complicate the already cramped trains any more than they are already. But you don't cool the interiors of the trains as much as you would with on-board AC. I don't doubt that a station cooling approach gets a better degrees-per-pound ratio, averaged over the whole underground space at least, and so is a more sensible option. But i do wonder if there aren't workable ways to get the insides of the trains cooler than is achievable that way. I'd say that cooling the stations is a pre-requsite to air-conditioning the trains, given how hot the Victoria Line tunnels already are. It's less of an issue with the other Tube lines, as the trains pump a lot of fresh air in already at the portals. |
#26
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Tim Fenton wrote:
"1506" wrote in message ... That is my memory of the London Subway also. That's going a long way back. Kingsway closed along with the rest of the tram network in 1952. There seems to be a Subway on every street, these days... -- Arthur Figgis Surrey, UK |
#27
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On Jul 23, 4:57*pm, Andy wrote:
And the regenerative braking on the new 2009 stock will also mean less heat released into the stations and tunnels in the first place. Ummm thats not strictly true. Overall you might be generating less heat directly from braking, true, but the type of train, with AC motors, will itself create more heat to be released, including indirectly from braking. Go back to the NR southern third rail zone power upgrade for Mk.1 stock replacement. What was that all about. All the new trains coming in had AC motors, replacing DC motors under the Mk.1s. The big issue was heating effect. AC motor characterisitics are such that it draws a higher constant current - this means the heating effect in lineside traction equipment is much increased - because heat dissipated is I^2*R [I-squared-R]. When the trains are regenerating, the heating effect in lineside eqpt is still I^2*R, it still is still being heated, it does not cool because it is reversed, and it does not cool because t gets no respite (like it does when a friction brake train brakes). A non regen braked train using friction brakes disspates the heat transformed from mechanical energy at the brake shoes/pads - wheel rim/disc interface. A regen braked train convert mechanical energy to electrical, which while contributing a useful energy saving does nonetheless heats lineside gear in doing so. 1967 stock Crompton/Brush LT115 DC traction motors are 53 kW cont. rating. 2009 stock Bombardier Mitrac AC traction motors are 75 kW cont. rating. 1967 stock 8-car trains are MTTMMTTM - 16 motors per train = 16 x 53 kW = 848 kW per train 2009 stock 8-car train are MTMMMMTM - 24 motors per train = 24 x 75 kW = 1800 kW per train All those motrs and traction packs get hot. A 2009 stock train draws over twice the traction load of 1967 stock, and thats before you look at DC v. AC, and before you look at auxiliary loads. All this air-con draws a load that was not there with 1967. Thats never put back into regen braking. Further, the service frequency will be increased, and there are more trains in service at any one time. True they will all regenerate, but there are more of them to accelerate in the first place, and accelerating at a higher rate. It all adds up - I bet one would not be far wrong to say current draw on the whole line with full TPH with 2009 stock may well be 3 times that of 1967 stock at the same voltage. Offset this by increasing from 630 V to 750 V which is a 30% current drop, so overall load doubled. All that heat has to go somehwere. And Peter is quite right, there is nowhere to dump the air-con load. NR southern zone has trackside power distrbution cables everywhere, LU does not, so at east not heating tunels that way. There is a substantial uplift in heating effect from the new trains. Unless my sums are seriously flawed, there'd have to be some seriously hefty cooling gear to cool stations. Gear that itself draws power ... maybe more than the entire train regenerated power is taken up by air- con ? -- Nick |
#28
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![]() "D7666" wrote There is a substantial uplift in heating effect from the new trains. Unless my sums are seriously flawed, there'd have to be some seriously hefty cooling gear to cool stations. Gear that itself draws power ... maybe more than the entire train regenerated power is taken up by air- con ? Add to that the congestion relief works at Victoria and the more frequent service, there'll be more passengers pumping kilowatts into the system. Perhaps the Victoria Line needs to be extended into the open air, at least so the piston effect of trains can add ventilation into the tunnels, and ideally so that the next generation (49 stock) can have aircon that takes heat out of the system and dumps it in the open air. Take over Chingford from National Rail? Quadruple Northumberland Park to Cheshunt, with a extended Victoria Line running the local service? Peter |
#29
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On Jul 24, 6:19*pm, D7666 wrote:
On Jul 23, 4:57*pm, Andy wrote: And the regenerative braking on the new 2009 stock will also mean less heat released into the stations and tunnels in the first place. Ummm thats not strictly true. Overall you might be generating less heat directly from braking, true, but the type of train, with AC motors, will itself create more heat to be released, including indirectly from braking. Ok, so how much more heat would be generated if the trains were not regenerating? Go back to the NR southern third rail zone power upgrade for Mk.1 stock replacement. What was that all about. All the new trains coming in had AC motors, replacing DC motors under the Mk.1s. The big issue was heating effect. And how much of the extra power requirement came from the trains being heavier. AC motor characterisitics are such that it draws a higher constant current - this means the heating effect in lineside traction equipment is much increased - because heat dissipated is I^2*R [I-squared-R]. When the trains are regenerating, the heating effect in lineside eqpt is still I^2*R, it still is still being heated, it does not cool because it is reversed, and it does not cool because t gets no respite (like it does when a friction brake train brakes). A non regen braked train using friction brakes disspates the heat transformed from mechanical energy at the brake shoes/pads - wheel rim/disc interface. A regen braked train convert mechanical energy to electrical, which while contributing a useful energy saving does nonetheless heats lineside gear in doing so. But much of the regenerated energy should be going into powering other trains, sure you need hefty lineside kit in case everything all brakes at the same time, but the Victoria line should be ideal for reusing the energy. Also isn't the peak current draw less with AC than DC. The AC motors will be warming up fairly constantly during the whole of the acceleration (and deccelaration) phases and so their heat production will be spread out. The old DC motors will warm up much more quickly at the start as that is the point of peak current draw and, of course, this is will be in the stations. 1967 stock Crompton/Brush LT115 DC traction motors are 53 kW cont. rating. 2009 stock Bombardier Mitrac AC traction motors are 75 kW cont. rating. 1967 stock 8-car trains are MTTMMTTM - 16 motors per train = 16 x 53 kW = 848 kW per train 2009 stock 8-car train are MTMMMMTM - 24 motors per train = 24 x 75 kW = 1800 kW per train All those motrs and traction packs get hot. Piers Connor (in his series The Underground Electric Train in Underground News, June 2007) say the following: "In order to make use of the additional throughput capability of the new signalling, the 2009 Stock has a higher performance than the current stock. The existing 1967 Tube Stock draws about 2,700 amps maximum, while the 2009 Tube Stock will draw 3,500 and is capable of drawing up to 4,500 amps." This looks like well under double the peak current draw. A 2009 stock train draws over twice the traction load of 1967 stock, and thats before you look at DC v. AC, and before you look at auxiliary loads. All this air-con draws a load that was not there with 1967. Thats never put back into regen braking. Further, the service frequency will be increased, and there are more trains in service at any one time. True they will all regenerate, but there are more of them to accelerate in the first place, and accelerating at a higher rate. It all adds up - I bet one would not be far wrong to say current draw on the whole line with full TPH with 2009 stock may well be 3 times that of 1967 stock at the same voltage. Offset this by *increasing from 630 V to 750 V which is a 30% current drop, so overall load doubled. All that heat has to go somehwere. And Peter is quite right, there is nowhere to dump the air-con load. Lineside equipment will be MUCH easier to cool, as it is in fixed locations which should already be ventilated. NR southern zone has trackside power distrbution cables everywhere, LU does not, so at east not heating tunels that way. There is a substantial uplift in heating effect from the new trains. Unless my sums are seriously flawed, there'd have to be some seriously hefty cooling gear to cool stations. Gear that itself draws power ... maybe more than the entire train regenerated power is taken up by air- con ? Just to be clear, I wasn't arguing for air conditioning to be fitted, but I still think you are mis-estimating the effect of regeneration on the total energy consumption and heating for the new trains. The whole point of regeneration is to reuse the energy which used to be 'wasted' in resistor banks on the trains (with the original rheostatic train brakes). My understanding is that little of the recovered energy goes back to the lineside equipment, if the current rails are not receptive, then the spare energy goes to resistors, like in older stock. The extra big lineside equipment is purely because more current is needed in the first place. |
#30
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Andy wrote:
Just to be clear, I wasn't arguing for air conditioning to be fitted, but I still think you are mis-estimating the effect of regeneration on the total energy consumption and heating for the new trains. The whole point of regeneration is to reuse the energy which used to be 'wasted' in resistor banks on the trains (with the original rheostatic train brakes). My understanding is that little of the recovered energy goes back to the lineside equipment, if the current rails are not receptive, then the spare energy goes to resistors, like in older stock. The extra big lineside equipment is purely because more current is needed in the first place. What happened to the test of trackside rotating cylinders designed to store the energy from regenerative braking? |
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