Racing Wheel : Thrustmaster T500RS +
Shift TH8R
The
Siemens ACS-64, or
Amtrak Cities Sprinter, is an electric locomotive designed by
Siemens Mobility for use in the northeastern
United States. The first 70 locomotives built are to operate on the
Northeast Corridor (
NEC) and the
Keystone Corridor, replacing the railroads' existing fleet of
AEM-7 and
HHP-8 locomotives.[9] The first
Amtrak ACS-64 entered service in
February 2014; deliveries will last until
2015.
SEPTA Regional Rail will receive an additional 13 locomotives for commuter service in 2018.
The design is based on the EuroSprinter and the Vectron platforms, which
Siemens sells in
Europe and
Asia.[10] Significant structural changes to the design were made to comply with
American crashworthiness requirements, including the addition of crumple zones and anti-climbing features as well as structural strengthening of the cab, resulting in a heavier locomotive than the previous models.[7][4]
The body is a monocoque structure with integral frames and sidewalls.[4]
The locomotives are able to operate from the 25 kV
60 Hz, 12.5 kV 60 Hz, and 12 kV 25 Hz power supplies used on the Northeast Corridor, and have a maximum power of 6,400 kilowatts (8,600 hp).[10] The locomotives are designed to be capable of accelerating 18 Amfleet cars to maximum speeds as high as 125 mph (
201 km/h) on the Northeast Corridor in a little over eight minutes,[11] with trains of eight Amfleets taking two and a half minutes to reach the same speed.[12] They have advanced safety systems, including specialized couplers designed to keep trains from rolling over, jackknifing, or derailing during a collision.[13] Additionally, the new locomotives are more energy-efficient than those that they replace, and lack dynamic braking grids in favor of
100% regenerative braking, depending on grid receptiveness.
Energy generated from the brake may also be utilized to meet
HEP needs, further reducing current draw from the grid.[13]
Each locomotive has two electrical converter units with three
IGBT based, water cooled output inverters per converter. Two of the inverters power the traction motors; the third unit supplies head-end and auxiliary power.[4] The HEP/auxiliary inverters are dual-redundant and identical (rated 1,
000 kW or 1,
300 hp), allowing the locomotive to remain in service should one inverter fail en route.[11] The locomotive bogies are fabricated steel designs, with low-lying traction links and center pivot pin. The traction motors are frame-mounted, with torque transmitted via a hollow shaft drive.
Locomotive braking is facilitated by cheek mounted disc brakes on each wheel.[4]
In order to comply with "
Buy American" laws, the locomotives are being manufactured at Siemens' factory in
Florin, California, with traction and electrical equipment being manufactured at Siemens facilities in Norcross and
Alpharetta, Georgia.[7]
Traction inverters are manufactured in
Alpharetta, and the traction motors and gear units are manufactured in
Norwood, Ohio
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- published: 12 Mar 2016
- views: 1