An industry trend in the USA:
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4,000 Gallons of Diesel at $3.75/Gal = $15,000.00 per 1,000 miles.
16,000 Gallons of LNG at $1.25/Gal =$20,000.00 per 1,000 miles.
(1/3 cost per unit) X (4x units) + (Y=Retrofit and Infastructure costs) = Not Cheaper.
Don't see how that makes financial sense.
Plus with the extra tonnage that the extra wagon carrying the gas will weigh reduces the cost effectiveness per mile even more.
Similar with retro fitting a car to lpg over here, costs hundreds of pounds. LPG does less per gallon so you need to run it for years to re coup your costs.
Quite so.
The extra "gotcha" with the "Locomotive" scenerio though, is that it is not "less expensive" at all, so not a chance of long term recoup.
A Bio diesel mix was tried over here, in an effort to go greener ( read that as a publicity stunt and to cut costs). It went no further as far as I know.
4,000 Gallons of Diesel at $3.75/Gal = $15,000.00 per 1,000 miles.
16,000 Gallons of LNG at $1.25/Gal =$20,000.00 per 1,000 miles.
(1/3 cost per unit) X (4x units) + (Y=Retrofit and Infastructure costs) = Not Cheaper.
Don't see how that makes financial sense.
Could you please send some propane out her so I can heat my home a little cheaper. Here diesel is 3.89/gal. cash, 4.09/gal. credit card. Propane/LPG. 3.98/gal. in summer, 4.39/gal. winter.
Of course railroads would get diesel cheaper since they use off road diesel and purchase in large quantity.
Could you please send some propane out her so I can heat my home a little cheaper. Here diesel is 3.89/gal. cash, 4.09/gal. credit card. Propane/LPG. 3.98/gal. in summer, 4.39/gal. winter.
Of course railroads would get diesel cheaper since they use off road diesel and purchase in large quantity.
No, it doesn't blow up like a bomb, natural gas is only flammable between 5 and 15% vapor density. Diesel vapors are far more explosive.John
Tell that to the dozens of families who can ignite their tap water with a match, due to contamination from Fracking...
LNG is MUCH more "Explosive" than Diesel fuel...easily verified by placing a pint jar of each on a concrete floor, then toss a cigarette at them. Diesel evaporates much slower, which results in negligable amounts of combustable vapors...yes, it will burn, but it will not "explode"...which is why even the oldest diesel engines used spray nozzles to atomize the fuel, compared to say, a carburated engine, where fuel particles (droplets) are much larger in size. (Ever try to run Diesel thru a carbureter?)
And what does Fracking have to do with locomotive fuels????
John
snipet...yes, it will burn, but it will not "explode"..
snipet
See this video for a diesel explosion.
http://video.foxnews.com/v/30924860...n-mississippi/?intcmp=obnetwork#sp=show-clips
It also explodes in a diesel engine just by pressure. That's what propels the engine. So you can't say diesel doesn't explode.
Oh and yes I do know the difference between lpg and lng and cng. I worked in the oilfield for 40 years.![]()