My suspicion is that the steam engine produces a lot more (and from 0 RPM, at that!).
A steam engine could go approximately 100 miles without refueling or taking water, while a diesel locomotive could reach as far as 600 miles without servicing. A diesel has a much higher starting tractive effort than any steam locomotive. The diesel has a thermal efficiency greater than three times that of the best steam engine.
How does this tickle your fancy: the side rods as an example weigh 1100 lbs per side on the Daylight 4449 (seen here in Montana in 2004)#ad
At 80 MPH (a speed this engine is sometimes operated at) the drivers turn 11 revs per second (660 RPM). You are taking 1100 pounds and shooting it back and forth 32 inches 22 times a second
Don't quote me, but I have reason to believe that a number of the late models built in the N&W shops employed aluminum rods. I'll have to look again to be sure. I do know for sure they are on needle bearings. In fact they built everything on needle rollers.
A it was explained to me, the steam engine, be it a locomotive or a tractor has the same HP at any rpm. This is due to the fact that whatever the steam pressure is, is what it is. It doesn't change.
200 psi into the cylinders is there, be it 10 rpm or 200. A steam engine is an external combustion engine. They are nothing alike and so cannot be compared to an internal combustion engine.
I wish I could recall where I learned that and if it's 100 accurate.
the 611 flipped off the tracks in 1956 after the engineer took a corner too fast!
Vaughn
I would think that it would have "constant" torque at any rpm. That would make HP vary linearly with rpm. You can't possibly have any HP if you aren't moving. The reason constant is in quotes, is that you would loose some pressure as your speed increased. As you expand the steam in the boiler through the pistons, you will cool the steam and lower the pressure. At greater speeds there is a point where the boiler can't possibly keep up with the steam demand. Also, as you increase the flow rate of the steam in all of the lines, you have more friction creating a head loss as well.
Another thing I was thinking about while reading this thread is how the cylinders are arranged on a locomotive. Are they staggered like the pistons in a multiple cylinder engine. Your torque is dependent on the pressure in the cylinder, the length of the crank arm and the angle of the piston rod. There should be a place where they line up and no matter how much pressure is in the cylinder you won't have any torque, only force. Are the cylinders turned so that they are off axis with the driving wheels?