RI 3887 Observation on the Use of a Diesel Freight Locomotive through a Railway Tunnel

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
L. B. Berger L. H. McGuire
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
26
File Size:
1289 KB
Publication Date:
Jun 1, 1946

Abstract

"During the period October 31 to November 4, 1944, tests were conducted by the Bureau of Mines in the Cascade Tunnel of the Great Northern Railway Cc. to determine the effects upon the tunnel atmosphere of the use of a Diesel freight locomotive through the tunnel. These tests were conducted at the request of the company to ascertain whether undesirable conditions might be caused by the discharge of Diesel engine exhaust gas in the tunnel, which was constructed for an electric haulage system and is not provided with equipment for mechanical ventilation. The use of Diesel locomotives on the division that includes the Cascade Tunnel was under consideration as a means of augmenting haulage facilities for the abnormal freight tonnage that must be handled during wartime.As the Bureau of Mines has received requests for information on the extent of contamination of the air of railroad tunnels by Diesel locomotives, this report was prepared to make available for general information the data obtained during the tests in the Cascade Tunnel. As the test locomotive is of a type used on other railroads, and as the bore and grade of the tunnel and the tonnages moved are comparable to such factors on other roads, the data should be sufficiently representative to be of general interest. The exceptional length of the Cascade Tunnel made it an excellent location for obtaining information on the composition of the tunnel air and on the movement of air induced in the tunnel by the passage of trains.The writers are indebted to C. O. Jenks, vice president of the Great Northern Railway Co., who arranged for the tests, and to the following personnel of the railroad who cooperated in the conduct of the tests: I. E. Clary, superintendent, Spokane Division, J. L. Robson, superintendent of motive power, oil and gas equipment, J. F. N. Gaynor, superintendent of electric operations, William Lowney, master mechanic, Spokane Division, and D. F. Marston and Verne Nelson, assistant superintendents of electric operations.The Cascade Tunnel is on the Spokane Division of the Great Northern Railway and pierces the Cascade Mountains some 49 miles west of Wenatchee, Wash. The west end of this division is electrified from Appleyard Station, 2 miles east of Wenatchee, to Skykomish, Wash., a distance of 73 miles. Until the described tests, only electric haulage had been employed through the tunnel since it was first opened to traffic in January 1929.The Cascade is the longest railroad tunnel in the United States - 7.79 miles. The tunnel is single-track, perfectly straight, concrete-lined, and is on an essentially uniform grade of 1.56 percent, ascending from west to east. The cross-sectional area of the tunnel is 314 square feet, the dimensions being shown in figure 1. Elevation of the east portal is 2,880 feet and of the west portal, 2,240 feet."
Citation

APA: L. B. Berger L. H. McGuire  (1946)  RI 3887 Observation on the Use of a Diesel Freight Locomotive through a Railway Tunnel

MLA: L. B. Berger L. H. McGuire RI 3887 Observation on the Use of a Diesel Freight Locomotive through a Railway Tunnel. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1946.

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