Hi everybody.
Even if there is a suitable future fuel source for rail steam then you would still have the problem of the unstable nature of steam power in a modern transport environment. As someone who works in industrial safety I feel it would be very difficult to get acceptance from employers or their insurers for the widespread the use of steam power when other power options are available and more viable both financially and on safety grounds.
If you take a diesel power unit then the hot side of the unit (the section which transports hot gases or vapours and therefore can cause substantial injury or death) is confined to the exhaust system which is normally quite short before being vented to the atmosphere where it is quickly diluted and cooled.
If you then take a steam power unit the hot side of the unit extends from the boiler output, then through the input side of the motive plant (whether that be turbine or piston) and then through the exhaust side of the motive plant where it can be vented into the atmosphere or more likely unless you wanted your train to have stop continuously to take on water the steam will have to be passed into a condensing/cooling unit where the water could be passed back into the boiler. Throughout the whole passage of the steam propellant there would be a potential for serious leaks such as flange burst which can cause devastating injury or death to anyone in the vicinity especially employees such as maintenance workers.
Steam turbine power is suited to stable environments such as power stations etc where easy monitoring/inspections can be undertaken continuously and safely while the plant is running. In a transport environment the foregoing is certainly not possible and where continuously varying stresses would be applied, the potential for sudden plant failure with a high possibility of causing serious injury to anyone in the vicinity could not be ignored.
Britain ran large amounts of steam motive power right up to the mid-1960s. Anyone who reads British rail’s industrial injury records for the time period 1945 until 1960 will quickly realise just how dangerous steam power really is.
Bill
Even if there is a suitable future fuel source for rail steam then you would still have the problem of the unstable nature of steam power in a modern transport environment. As someone who works in industrial safety I feel it would be very difficult to get acceptance from employers or their insurers for the widespread the use of steam power when other power options are available and more viable both financially and on safety grounds.
If you take a diesel power unit then the hot side of the unit (the section which transports hot gases or vapours and therefore can cause substantial injury or death) is confined to the exhaust system which is normally quite short before being vented to the atmosphere where it is quickly diluted and cooled.
If you then take a steam power unit the hot side of the unit extends from the boiler output, then through the input side of the motive plant (whether that be turbine or piston) and then through the exhaust side of the motive plant where it can be vented into the atmosphere or more likely unless you wanted your train to have stop continuously to take on water the steam will have to be passed into a condensing/cooling unit where the water could be passed back into the boiler. Throughout the whole passage of the steam propellant there would be a potential for serious leaks such as flange burst which can cause devastating injury or death to anyone in the vicinity especially employees such as maintenance workers.
Steam turbine power is suited to stable environments such as power stations etc where easy monitoring/inspections can be undertaken continuously and safely while the plant is running. In a transport environment the foregoing is certainly not possible and where continuously varying stresses would be applied, the potential for sudden plant failure with a high possibility of causing serious injury to anyone in the vicinity could not be ignored.
Britain ran large amounts of steam motive power right up to the mid-1960s. Anyone who reads British rail’s industrial injury records for the time period 1945 until 1960 will quickly realise just how dangerous steam power really is.
Bill
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