GE Dash 9 Series

GE Dash 9 Series

Type and origin
Power type Diesel-electric
Builder General Electric Transportation
Specifications
Configuration:
  AAR

C-C (C40-9, C40-9W,[1] C44-9W,[2] C-38AChe)

B+B-B+B (Dash 9-40BBW)

Gauge 4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm)
Trucks GE HiAd
Length 73 ft 2 in (22.30 m)
Fuel capacity

4,600 US gal (17,400 l) (C40-9, C40-9W[1])

5,300 US gal (20,100 l) (C44-9W[2])

Prime mover GE 7FDL16
Engine type 45° V16, four stroke cycle
Aspiration Turbocharged
Alternator GE
Traction motors GE
Cylinders 16 (C40-9, C40-9W,[1] C44-9W[2])
Transmission Alternator, silicon diode rectifiers, DC traction motors
Performance figures
Power output

4,000 hp (2,980 kW) (C40-9, C40-9W, Dash 9-BBW)

4,400 hp (3,280 kW) (C44-9W)

5,100 hp (3,800 kW) (C-38AChe)

Career
Operators See text
Locale North America, Australia, Brazil, China
Disposition Most still in service as of 2012.

The Dash 9 Series is a line of diesel locomotives built by GE Transportation Systems. It replaced the Dash 8 Series in the mid-1990s, and was superseded by the Evolution Series in the mid-2000s. Dash 9 series locomotives are some of the most common in the United States.

Specifications

The Dash 9 Series is an improved version of the Dash 8 Series. Like that earlier Series, it has a microprocessor-equipped engine control unit, and a modular system of construction of the vehicle body.

All models of the Dash 9 Series are powered by a 16-cylinder, turbocharged, GE 7FDL 4-stroke diesel engine, with electronic fuel injection and split cooling.

Dash 9 Series locomotives also ride on HiAdTM high adhesion trucks, with low weight transfer characteristics and microprocessor controlled wheelslip.

Six axle models

Common feature

A specification common to all Dash 9 Series six axle models is the AAR wheel arrangement known as C-C

C40-9

NS C40-9 # 8801.

This version of the Dash 9 was manufactured between January and March 1995. All 125 examples of this model are owned by the Norfolk Southern Railway.

The C40-9 is the only model in the Dash 9 Series to feature the standard cab design. All were built with rooftop-mounted air conditioners which gives them a rather unusual and distinctive look - and were quickly coined "top hats" by the railfan community. Other than the standard cab, the model is identical in all specifications to the wide-nose "North American" safety cab Dash 9-40CW (or C40-9W) model (see below).

NS specifically requested the standard cab, and may have purchased more units had the Federal Railroad Administration not required it to purchase the wide-nose C40-9W version instead.[3] Besides, standard cab GE's had become more expensive by the mid-1990s, since they were now considered optional equipment by the builder, and thus priced as such, and when a carrier is purchasing one or two hundred units of a particular model at a time, even a slight extra price for a customized cab can add hundreds of thousands of dollars to the cost of a locomotive order.

In 2015, the railroad announced the locomotives would be given a new wide cab, A.C. traction motors, cab signals, LSL and uprated to 4400 HP, making them AC44C6M

C40-9W

NS C40-9W # 9258.

All 1,090 units of this model were built for the Norfolk Southern Railway, as road numbers 8889 to 9978.

The orders for these units were basically an extension of NS's previous order for the standard cab Dash 9-40C (or C40-9) (see above).

They were built under the same premise that a lower power rating than the 4,400 hp (3,300 kW) rating of the Dash 9-44CW (or C44-9W) (see below) would prolong the life of the engine, and use less fuel.

However, there is a manual override switch that allows the engineer to run the engine with all 4,400 hp (3,300 kW) if necessary.

As with the C40-9, Norfolk Southern began to upgrade their C40-9Ws from 4,000 to 4,400 hp and AC traction in mid-2015, making them AC44C6M's.

C44-9W

Hamersley Iron C44-9W # 7072 at the Brockman 4 mine.

The C44-9W model was in production between 1993 and 2004.

Of all the Dash 9 Series models, this one received by far the greatest number of orders.

A total of 1,697 orders for C44-9Ws were received from Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway and successor BNSF Railway (known at the time as the Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railway).

Other large orders from North American operators were placed by Canadian National Railway, and a number of operators that have since been absorbed by the present day Union Pacific Railroad, including Chicago and Northwestern and Southern Pacific.

Substantial orders for this model were also received from operators in Australia and Brazil, in the latter case for 1,600 mm (5 ft 3 in) broad gauge versions.

C-38AChe

China Railways NJ2 0053.

The C-38AChe, also known as the NJ2, is operated by China Railways.

Built in Erie, Pennsylvania, it is based on a standard Dash 9-44CW (or C44-9W) (see above) and marketed as the GE C38AChe.

The model was specially customised for high altitude operation on the Qinghai-Tibet Railway route.

It is used on the Qingzang Railway, which connects Xining, Qinghai Province, to Lhasa, Tibet Autonomous Region, in the People's Republic of China.

Eight axle model

DASH 9-40BBW

This is a 1,000 mm (3 ft 3 38 in) (meter gauge) version of the C40-9W. It was manufactured between 1997 and 2006.

All 141 examples of the model are owned by the Estrada de Ferro Vitória a Minas[4] (EFVM), a railroad in Brazil.

The model is equipped with four B-style trucks, two at each end, replacing the conventional C-style trucks. The different trucks are necessary due to the railroad load limit per axis, which is 25 metric tons (±55,156 lbs).

The standard C40-9W traction motors cannot fit in the narrower trucks. To achieve the same total power, more of the smaller traction motors are needed.

See also

References

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 C40-9W Datasheet, The Diesel Shop
  2. 1 2 3 C44-9W Datasheet, The Diesel Shop
  3. "The GE C40-9/W". American-Rails.com. Retrieved 26 January 2012.
  4. See pt:Estrada de Ferro Vitória a Minas (in Portuguese).

Bibliography

  • Lamb, J. Parker (2007). Evolution of the American Diesel Locomotive. Railroads Past and Present. Bloomington, IN, USA: Indiana University Press. ISBN 9780253348630. 
  • McDonnell, Greg (2008). Locomotives: The Modern Diesel and Electric Reference. Erin, Ontario: Boston Mills Press. ISBN 978-1550464931. 
  • Solomon, Brian (2000). The American Diesel Locomotive. Osceola, WI: MBI Publishing Company. ISBN 978-0-7603-0666-6. 
  • Solomon, Brian (2003). GE Locomotives: 110 Years of General Electric Motive Power. St. Paul, MN, USA: MBI Publishing. ISBN 9780760313619. 
  • Solomon, Brian (2010). Modern Locomotives: High Horsepower Diesels 1966–2000. New York: Crestline. ISBN 978-0785826811. 
  • Solomon, Brian (2011). Modern Diesel Power. Minneapolis, MN: Voyageur Press. ISBN 978-0-76-033943-5. 
  • Solomon, Brian (2012). North American Locomotives: A Railroad-by-Railroad Photohistory. Minneapolis, MN, USA: Voyageur Press. ISBN 9780760343708. 

This article is based upon a translation of the Japanese language version as at August 2012.

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