Milwaukee Road class EP-3

Milwaukee Road class EP-3
Milwaukee Road class EP-3
Power type Electric
Builder Baldwin Locomotive Works / Westinghouse
Build date 1919
Total produced 10
Configuration 4-6-2+2-6-4
AAR wheel arr. 2-C-1+1-C-2
UIC classification (2′Co1′)(1′Co2′)
Gauge 4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm)
Leading wheel
diameter
36 in (914 mm)
Driver diameter 68 in (1,727 mm)
Trailing wheel
diameter
36 in (914 mm)
Wheelbase 79 ft 10 in (24.33 m)
Length 88 ft 7 in (27.00 m)
Height 14 ft 6 in (4.42 m)
Electric system 3000 V direct current
Current collection
method
Two roof-mounted pantographs
Transmission Gearing and quill drive
Top speed 65 mph (105 km/h) (105 km/h)
Power output Continuous: 3,396 hp (2,532 kW);
One hour: 4,680 hp (3,490 kW)
Tractive effort 105,000 lbf (467 kN)
Train heating Steam generator
Career Milwaukee Road
Number 10300–10309; renumbered E10–E19 in 1939
First run 1919
Disposition All scrapped by 1957

The Milwaukee Road's class EP-3 comprised ten electric locomotives built in 1919 by Baldwin and Westinghouse. They were nicknamed Quills because of their use of a quill drive. Although they were good haulers and well liked by engineers, poor design and constant mechanical problems plagued them for their entire lives and they were the first of the Milwaukee Road's electric locomotives to be retired.

Contents

Design

General arrangement drawing.

When the Milwaukee Road decided to electrify the Coast Division in 1917, it attempted to re-equip with equipment bought from General Electric. The United States Railroad Administration, however, dictated that the order for electrical equipment be split between GE and Westinghouse. This meant that of the 15 electric locomotives needed, five (the EP-2s, or bi-polars) came from GE and 10 - the EP-3s - came from Westinghouse.

The EP-3s, while designed to meet the same specifications as the bi-polars, were a completely different design from their GE counterparts. Their appearance was sleeker, albeit less distinctive, with a single long boxcab-style carbody containing all of the electric equipment. Their wheel arrangement was the same as a back-to-back pair of 4-6-2 "Pacific" steam engines, complete with high 68" drivers. They were double-ended and designed for high-speed passenger service.

One of the Quill's two frame and motor assemblies

The most noteworthy aspect of their design was the motor mounting system. The locomotive's six 566 hp traction motors were mounted directly to the frame, one above each driving axle. They were geared to a "quill," a steel tube 15 inches in diameter that was mounted around the axle. At each end of the quill, seven-armed "spiders" stuck out between the spokes of the driving wheels, and were connected to the drivers by coil springs. This system, which was later used very effectively on the famous GG1 locomotive, minimized weight suspended directly from the axles, as the traction motors were bolted directly to the locomotive frame.

Design flaws and rebuilding

Side view of number 10307.

The "Quills" entered service between late 1919 and early 1921 and assigned numbers 10300-10309. Assigned mainly to the Mountain Division, they were immediately popular with crews. They could easily pull trains exceeding design specifications at 70-80 mph. They didn't slip like the GE boxcabs and they were much smoother-riding than the bi-polars.

Within a year of entering service, however, severe design flaws began to become apparent. The EP-3s were virtually identical to the New Haven's class EP-2 locomotives, but were heavier in weight and had a much more lightly built frame. The Milwaukee Road's new EP-3s, unlike the trouble-free New Haven boxcabs of similar design, immediately started experiencing broken axles and frame members, cracked wheels and spokes, and deformed suspension springs.

It was an embarrassment for Westinghouse, which had designed the locomotives far too lightly and rigidly. There was too little lateral play in the drivers, causing excessive wheel wear, and the frames were breaking under the stress of high-speed operation through twisting mountain rights-of-way. During 1922 a series of meetings was held to work on design changes for the locomotives.

Baldwin, which had built the locomotives in conjunction with Westinghouse, recommended splitting the body of the locomotive in two, effectively creating a permanently coupled two-unit boxcab. The Milwaukee Road's Electrification Department under Reinier Beeuwkes had come to differing conclusions about the best course of action to take, and resisted Baldwin's recommendation that all ten "Quills" be cut in two. Instead only one, number 10301, was given this modification. The alteration was not found to help the problems, and it was eventually converted back to single-body configuration.

A second "Quill" was modified to the Milwaukee Road's specifications, and with more success. The entire series was effectively converted to single-end operation and were fitted with Commonwealth Delta idler trucks of better design than the originals to help guide the locomotives into curves. The frames were also completely rebuilt with heavier steel.

In service

The running gear (minus motors) of an EP-3.
An EP-3 pulling an eastbound train from Seattle.
U.S. President Harding in the cab of EP-3 number 10305

The "Quills" never really met the standards set by their GE-designed counterparts. They were constant headaches for the Milwaukee Road mechanical department and were rebuilt five times during their service lives. They were very heavy and the large drivers were suspected of contributing to frame breakage. They were prone to derailing and their weight tended to increase the severity of such derailments. Locomotive E13 (the "Quills" were renumbered E10–E19 in 1939) was destroyed in a derailment at Soudan, Montana in 1947.

In the late 1940s, with the Little Joes entering service and the older electric locomotives worn out from heavy use during World War II, the Electrification Department initiated a program to rebuild the Milwaukee Road's electric locomotives for continued service. The "Quills" were not included in the program. Instead, the seven remaining locomotives (three had already been retired due to wrecks) were gradually retired and scrapped between 1952 and 1957.

Roster


First Number 1939 number Baldwin serial number Date built Disposition
10300 E10 51000 December 1918 Scrapped May 1955
10301 E11 51844 June 1919 Scrapped April 1957
10302 E12 51845 June 1919 Scrapped May 1954
10303 E19 (allocated, but never carried) 52111 August 1919 Wrecked January 1933; not repaired, stored until scrapped September 1942
10304 E13 52170 August 1919 Wrecked, Soudan, Montana, scrapped July 1947
10305 E14 52215 August 1919 Scrapped September 1952
10306 E15 52239 August 1919 Scrapped May 1955
10307 E16 52302 September 1919 Scrapped May 1955
10308 E17 52347 September 1919 Scrapped December 1950
10309 E18 52362 September 1919 Scrapped April 1957

References

  • Holley, Noel T. (1999). The Milwaukee Electrics. Edmonds, Washington: Hundman Publishing Company. 
  • Middleton, William D. (1974). When the Steam Railroads Electrified. Milwaukee, Wisconsin: Kalmbach Publishing Company. 
  • Warner, Paul T. (June 1958). "Locomotives of the Milwaukee Road". Pacific Railway Journal (Southern California Chapter, Railway and Locomotive Historical Society) 2 (6): 3–55. 
  • Edson, William D. (Spring 1977). "Milwaukee Road All Time Steam, Diesel and Electric Roster". Railroad History (The Railway and Locomotive Historical Society Inc.) (136): 29–124. 


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