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Run away locomotive

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Got this e-mail from a friend of mine. . talk about some SMOKE... . :D



This was the scene at Marceline a few weeks back when the 791 bought the farm. Mech desk said an injector likely became stuck wide open filling a cylinder with fuel and thereby causing a piston to let go. Must have badly cracked the block as after hitting the kill switches and with all the breakers off the thing ran for half an hour, making like run 8 just on the crankcase oil, producing a tremendous thick cloud of gray smoke. Was on a Sunday night, we stopped right across from the old coal tower in Marceline, drew a fair amount of people gawkers. Marceline chimney savers were called but we didn't need them, no fire inside the hood at all. Rear unit and first few stacks covered with oil. After it finally died just took it dead in tow. Close examination revealed little exterior damage on the motor, no oil or water leaks inside the hood. Image from my conductor's cellphone, didn't have my cam with this trip.
 
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Whoa!!!!!!!! I've had a few dash 7's & 8's belch under load for various reasons and an SD40 with a healthy dynamic brake grid fire but that takes the cake!
 
Maybe warranty will cover it. (pull off any fueling boxes first) :rolleyes::D

That must've been a sight. I would thiink it would be a little creepy to be in close range of a runaway like that. :eek:
 
That would be a great first starter pic in GREAT SMOKE STORIES... Oh well, too bad you posted it in here already. . Awesome pic!



-Chris-
 
Hey I have been in that guys shoes before. Many times we got outside to take a leak and the reason is that the company does very little maintaining of the potty. Most stink so bad it makes ya wanna puke. I remember one night we left McAlister Ok headed home to Ft Worth and did not know that the 4th engine was a rolling roman candle. There were fireballs about the size of golfballs coming out of the stack the whole way home, lol. About 10 miles outside Ft Worth the dispatcher notified us that we needed to check the engines for a fire due to the fact that we were setting fires everywhere in the right away. We had traveled 187 miles with that engine spewing fire.



EMD-run8,



Those dynamic grids put on an impressive show when they let loose, scary as all get out too.
 
I know this picture was posted in fun. For those who are not train nuts the Union Pacific #844 is actually an oil burner. This photo with all the black smoke is purely for the photographers. A proper fire produces very little black smoke even when the engine is under load. The firing valve can be cranked open to produce dramatic effects however this is shunned as black smoke is unburned fuel and a waste of $$. This locomotive has never been retired--she is still in active service today.
 
Drewhenry said:
I know this picture was posted in fun. For those who are not train nuts the Union Pacific #844 is actually an oil burner. This photo with all the black smoke is purely for the photographers. A proper fire produces very little black smoke even when the engine is under load. The firing valve can be cranked open to produce dramatic effects however this is shunned as black smoke is unburned fuel and a waste of $$. This locomotive has never been retired--she is still in active service today.





I did not know that. cool picture either way. Thanks



Actually I figured someone was just tailgating him and he was giving them the "smokey finger". Probably a TDR member. :D
 
I checked out that 844. Pretty cool! But I prefer the engines without those big side plates blocking your view of all that plumbing and mechanism around the boiler.



I like this one:

#ad




[sorry... don't mean to hijack, but I get all excited whenever there's a big locomotive thread]



Ryan
 
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