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Offline Dreadnought  
#1 Posted : 08 January 2009 04:15:29(UTC)
Dreadnought

Canada   
Joined: 24/12/2008(UTC)
Posts: 418
Location: Niagara, Ontario
I have noticed in Europe, some locomotives have both pantographs up, some only one. Freight trains seemed more likely to use both at the same time. When it is one up it can be the rear, or front one.
I was in Toulouse France last fall. I noticed locomotives often put both pantographs up when stopped, and lowered one as they moved off.
Does anyone know why, and when it is one or both?
Thanks,
Offline mike c  
#2 Posted : 08 January 2009 05:19:26(UTC)
mike c

Canada   
Joined: 28/11/2007(UTC)
Posts: 7,901
Location: Montreal, QC
I am not an expert on this subject.

Most trains that I have seen have had the rear pantograph in use. In some cases, the front pantograph is used to prevent damage from sparks and small pieces of heated carbon (from the wiper) from damaging the first few cars or coaches trailing behind it.
This is especially the case with (new) auto carriers, petroleum and other flammable material.
I remember reading something about it being more common for loks to run with both pantos raised when the catenary is DC rather than AC, so this is likely more common in France and Italy to name a few countries using primarily DC power.

Regards

Mike C
Offline TTRExpress  
#3 Posted : 08 January 2009 07:26:15(UTC)
TTRExpress

United States   
Joined: 06/04/2006(UTC)
Posts: 655
Typically with freight trains, the front pantograph is used if there is fuel, oil, flammable or hazardous material being transported. It is for safety in case of sparking that may cause an explosion or fire. If regular freight is being hauled, the rear one is used.
Regards (a Scot in Wisconsin),

Maurice [ETE, TTRCA, IG-TRIX Express, Maerklin-Insider & TRIX Profi-Club]
Offline foumaro  
#4 Posted : 08 January 2009 09:25:15(UTC)
foumaro

Greece   
Joined: 08/12/2004(UTC)
Posts: 4,420
Location: Attiki Athens Greece
There is always something to learn to this forum.biggrin
Offline Unholz  
#5 Posted : 08 January 2009 10:39:55(UTC)
Unholz

Switzerland   
Joined: 29/07/2007(UTC)
Posts: 1,394
Location: Switzerland
On old photographs, you will observe that it was more common to see both pantographs raised also in AC operation. This was due to the construction and/or the materials used on the contact plates on top of the pantographs which were, in those days, not "strong" enough to transmit the power from the catenary wire to the loco's transformer. By using both pantographs, the current was spread over two feeders, and this was considered to be more reliable. Modern contact plates are able to cope with the current, and it is no longer necessary to have two pantographs raised.

In my country, the rear pantograph is normally used (apart from the special cases mentioned in the previous postings) because if it is damaged or happens to get entangled with the catenary, then the front pantograph is normally not involved in the damage and can be used to get the train running again.

If two locomotives double head a train, then generally the front pantograph of the front locomotive is raised, whereas the rear pantograph of the second loco is raised. This is done to make sure that there is an ample distance between the two pantographs touching the catenary.
Offline H0  
#6 Posted : 08 January 2009 13:26:43(UTC)
H0


Joined: 16/02/2004(UTC)
Posts: 15,268
Location: DE-NW
Quote:
[size=1" face="Verdana" id="quote]quote:Originally posted by Dreadnought
<br />I have noticed in Europe[...]

In Europe you can find 15,000 and 25,000 Volt AC - one pantograph is normally sufficient to feed a train.

And you find 1,500 and 3,000 Volt DC, too. I've heard that it's common in the DC world to start with both pantographs and lower one when the train has reached a certain speed.

A loco can take 600 Amps in Germany.
To get the same power in the Netherlands it needs 6,000 Amps.

Look here:
https://www.marklin-user...erms=raise,catenary,rear
Regards
Tom
---
"In all of the gauges, we particularly emphasize a high level of quality, the best possible fidelity to the prototype, and absolute precision. You will see that in all of our products." (from Märklin New Items Brochure 2015, page 1) ROFLBTCUTS
UserPostedImage
Offline Renato  
#7 Posted : 08 January 2009 19:24:48(UTC)
Renato

Italy   
Joined: 19/03/2004(UTC)
Posts: 976
Location: Gorizia, Italy
Hi,

In Italy with the catenary system at 3.000 V DC, for the locomotives hauling passenger trains, only the rear pantograph is raised, for the reasons indicated by Unholz:

Quote

In my country, the rear pantograph is normally used (apart from the special cases mentioned in the previous postings) because if it is damaged or happens to get entangled with the catenary, then the front pantograph is normally not involved in the damage and can be used to get the train running again.

Unquote

I do not know if special regulations exist for the freight trains, but I have never seen raising both pantograph at the start and then lowering the front one.

Bye

Renato
Offline hemau  
#8 Posted : 08 January 2009 21:07:29(UTC)
hemau


Joined: 09/01/2007(UTC)
Posts: 589
Location: The Netherlands
Quote:
[size=1" face="Verdana" id="quote]quote:Originally posted by Renato
<br />

I do not know if special regulations exist for the freight trains, but I have never seen raising both pantograph at the start and then lowering the front one.

Bye

Renato

It looks familiar to me that a loc will start with two pantographs up and lowering the front one after having acquired some speed.
Regards, Henk
C and M track; CS1R and 2 MS
Offline DasBert33  
#9 Posted : 08 January 2009 21:24:14(UTC)
DasBert33

Belgium   
Joined: 21/01/2004(UTC)
Posts: 1,245
Quote:
[size=1" face="Verdana" id="quote]quote:Originally posted by Dreadnought
I was in Toulouse France last fall. I noticed locomotives often put both pantographs up when stopped, and lowered one as they moved off.
Does anyone know why, and when it is one or both?
Thanks,


I think they use 1500V DC in the south of France so, like already said, to cope with the high starting currents both pantos are raised.

You also might have noticed that the catenary is more 'heavy', contains more wires, than eg in Germany. This is also because of the higher currents.

Bert
Offline al_pignolo  
#10 Posted : 08 January 2009 22:57:50(UTC)
al_pignolo


Joined: 30/09/2005(UTC)
Posts: 904
Location: bologna, BO
Hi.

some days ago I talked on this subject with a friend who is a train driver. He told more or less what you say, but there is something to add.

DC operations is more complex because as you say there are greater currents involved.
This means also that catenary is bigger, but, and this is the problem, it is much more fragile!
So you at the same moment need more current, but travelling with 2 pantographs up means that the rear one is involved in oscillations in catenary caused by the front one and it can easily break or rip the catenary.
For this reason trains that need a great amount of current starts with both pantographs up and lower them at a certain speed, when it could be dangerous to have both them up.
In Italy, for what I know this is done at every stop with ETR500, the high speed trains. Maybe also for heavy goods trains.
I heard that this problem is even greater in France, because voltage is 1500V instead of 3000V.

Some multipurpose locos have different pantographs, and the "wrong" ones can be used only at speeds up to 20 Km/h. This is another reason why at a certain speed it is lowered.

In addition there are other problems that "common" passengers don't notice. In Italy there are two kind of 3000V catenary. One needsthe contact shoe in copper and the other one needs the contact shoe in graphite.
In some regions all the catenaries are the same kind, and the loco can travel with front or rear pantograph up without problems.
But in other regions, locos have a pantograph in copper and one in graphite, and they lift obviously the one required by the line they're running on. The "wrong" one can be used at low speed.

Pietro
Offline rschaffr  
#11 Posted : 08 January 2009 23:15:26(UTC)
rschaffr

United States   
Joined: 03/01/2003(UTC)
Posts: 5,180
Location: Southern New Jersey, USA
Very interesting, Pietro. You learn something new every day.
-Ron
Digital, Epoch IV-V(K-track/CS3/6021Connect/60216051), Epoch III(C-track/6021/6036/6051)
http://www.sem-co.com/~rschaffr/trains/trains.html
Offline mike c  
#12 Posted : 09 January 2009 01:09:25(UTC)
mike c

Canada   
Joined: 28/11/2007(UTC)
Posts: 7,901
Location: Montreal, QC
Quote:
[size=1" face="Verdana" id="quote]quote:Originally posted by Unholz
If two locomotives double head a train, then generally the front pantograph of the front locomotive is raised, whereas the rear pantograph of the second loco is raised. This is done to make sure that there is an ample distance between the two pantographs touching the catenary.


I seem to remember reading a study a few years back about how the vibrations when using 2 loks affected the catenary wire. I recall that there was some mention of greater spacing between pantographs minimized the sway of the catenary that was caused by the passage of the lok (and it's slider). I wonder if this is also true in model RR?

Regards

Mike C
Offline Dreadnought  
#13 Posted : 09 January 2009 05:27:36(UTC)
Dreadnought

Canada   
Joined: 24/12/2008(UTC)
Posts: 418
Location: Niagara, Ontario
Wonderful, and fascinating information. Thank you HO, I looked at the archive postings. They were excellent too.
My thanks to all for responding. My curiosity is satisfied.
Offline Tivvy  
#14 Posted : 09 January 2009 14:48:19(UTC)
Tivvy


Joined: 01/02/2008(UTC)
Posts: 414
Location: Melbourne, Victoria
Quote:
[size=1" face="Verdana" id="quote]quote:Originally posted by mike c
<br />
Quote:
[size=1" face="Verdana" id="quote]quote:Originally posted by Unholz
If two locomotives double head a train, then generally the front pantograph of the front locomotive is raised, whereas the rear pantograph of the second loco is raised. This is done to make sure that there is an ample distance between the two pantographs touching the catenary.


I seem to remember reading a study a few years back about how the vibrations when using 2 loks affected the catenary wire. I recall that there was some mention of greater spacing between pantographs minimized the sway of the catenary that was caused by the passage of the lok (and it's slider). I wonder if this is also true in model RR?

Regards

Mike C



It is more to do with the resonant frequency of the wire. The larger the gap though the lower the frequency which means the the "springs" in the pantographs can move quickly enough to stay touching the wire. Doesnt really apply to MRR as arcing isnt an issue.
Ep IV / V Marklin Layout
6 track dead end station, twin track loop, 4 track through station.
Under construction.
Offline al_pignolo  
#15 Posted : 09 January 2009 20:14:26(UTC)
al_pignolo


Joined: 30/09/2005(UTC)
Posts: 904
Location: bologna, BO
Thank you.

Just some little (and maybe obvious) postscript:

in countries where the original system was DC (France, Spain, Italy... and so on) all the new high speed lines are in AC at 25000 V 50 Hz, because in the wires it would be impossible to have the currents required by high speed trains if you ran them in DC.

In Italy the choice of 3000 V DC was done in 1928, when there were fascism. In that period DC 3000V sytem was choosen even if it was known that it could provide lower power than the 15000 V 16Hz that
was used in northern countries. But it was mandatory to have a system different from other countries for political reasons (mainly because of the autarky). A quite masochist way of thinking....

Recent built AC systems (France, Spain and Italy) have 50 Hz frequency instead of 16 Hz as in ancient ones because this frequency is the same of industrial (and civil) supplies. This allows to have the same distribution network used for industry, that is more simple and cheaper.

At 50 Hz you need a higher voltage (25000V instead of 15000V) to balance the greater inductive effects due to higher frequency.

Pietro
Offline H0  
#16 Posted : 09 January 2009 21:29:37(UTC)
H0


Joined: 16/02/2004(UTC)
Posts: 15,268
Location: DE-NW
Quote:
[size=1" face="Verdana" id="quote]quote:Originally posted by Tivvy
<br />It is more to do with the resonant frequency of the wire.

Not really. The front pantograph is raised if a loco, a control car, or sensitive freight (cars, explosives, wood) follows - even if the following loco has all pantographs lowered.
This applies to Germany at least.
Regards
Tom
---
"In all of the gauges, we particularly emphasize a high level of quality, the best possible fidelity to the prototype, and absolute precision. You will see that in all of our products." (from Märklin New Items Brochure 2015, page 1) ROFLBTCUTS
UserPostedImage
Offline mike c  
#17 Posted : 09 January 2009 22:07:17(UTC)
mike c

Canada   
Joined: 28/11/2007(UTC)
Posts: 7,901
Location: Montreal, QC
Quote:
[size=1" face="Verdana" id="quote]quote:Originally posted by H0
<br />
Quote:
[size=1" face="Verdana" id="quote]quote:Originally posted by Tivvy
<br />It is more to do with the resonant frequency of the wire.

Not really. The front pantograph is raised if a loco, a control car, or sensitive freight (cars, explosives, wood) follows - even if the following loco has all pantographs lowered.
This applies to Germany at least.


I believe that Tivvy was referring to my posting regarding the operation of two coupled locomotives where the first one had the front panto raised while the second had the rear one in use.

I had referred to the sway caused by the passage of the wiper and Tivvy referred to the resonant frequency, which is generated by that passage and causes the sway.

Our discussion did not mention a non-powered lok being towed, only two loks in tandem, as in the Swiss Re 10/10 or other dual traction setup.

Regards

Mike C
Offline kurtjr  
#18 Posted : 10 January 2009 12:46:40(UTC)
kurtjr

Switzerland   
Joined: 22/01/2007(UTC)
Posts: 55
In France it is mainly to start the heavy trains from standstill under the DC current lines. (to avoid damaging the one Pantograph) Once the train is rolling the front Panto usually comes down.

I saw a great video recently where they retired the CC6500 depicting this exact start under 1500V.

All SBB's, SNCF and US/CDN model's.
Offline kimballthurlow  
#19 Posted : 11 January 2009 06:34:56(UTC)
kimballthurlow

Australia   
Joined: 18/03/2007(UTC)
Posts: 6,670
Location: Brisbane, Australia
Great link, Kurt, to illustrate that catenary function.
Interesting that New South Wales railway system in Australia, also operates its electric network on 1500V DC
regards
Kimball
HO Scale - Märklin (ep II-III and VI, C Track, digital) - 2 rail HO (Queensland Australia, UK, USA) - 3 rail OO (English Hornby Dublo) - old clockwork O gauge - Live Steam 90mm (3.1/2 inch) gauge.
Offline jvuye  
#20 Posted : 11 January 2009 13:41:31(UTC)
jvuye

Belgium   
Joined: 01/03/2008(UTC)
Posts: 2,881
Location: South Western France
Not more to add to all the replies, except that the choices made for various electrification systems in Europe were dictated by the stand of technology at the time the decision was made, the geographic conditions and energy supply available.(Coal vs. hydraulic, etc.)
France started with 1500V in the 1920's, but as technology evolved and allowed for AC powered locomotives, most of the post WW II electrification was made under 25kv, 50Hz.
In this case, traction motors were still the same as DC locos(i.e. series wound DC) but with on board rectifiers (at first Mercury vapor, then later solid state)
For example the 1.5 KV DC SNCF BB 9200 (Marklin 3038) was basically slightly modified with a tranformer and a set of high power rectifiers to prodice the 25kV 50Hz BB 16000 series, practically undistinguishable from each other, except for the pantograph.
A third variation of the same design was the BB 25000 series, which were the first dual system high speed locos, basically mixing the components of both the precursor series.
I would venture to say that if Germany had these components available in the early 1900's, they would have probably never needed 16 2/3 Hz.
Today all locos have basically the same traction system using asynchronous 3-phase current, generated on board by a solid state giant power generator, which is either fed DC directly from thr catenary, or AC via a transformer and a set of fixed rectifiers, or derives its supply from a diesel driven generator.
All made possible by the fantastic developments in solid state power electronics.
Hope you find the info helpful
Jacques Vuye aka Dr.Eisenbahn
Once a vandal, learned to be better and had great success!
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