EMD 645
This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (February 2008) |
EMD 645 | |
---|---|
Overview | |
Manufacturer | Electro-Motive Division of General Motors |
Also called | E-Engine and F-Engine |
Production | 1965–1983; limited runs through the 1990s |
Layout | |
Configuration | 45° Vee in V6, V8, V12, V16, or V20 |
Displacement | 3,870 to 12,900 cu in (63.4 to 211.4 L) 645 cu in (10.6 L) per cylinder |
Cylinder bore | 9+1⁄16 in (230 mm) |
Piston stroke | 10 in (254 mm) |
Cylinder block material | flat, formed and rolled structural steel members, and steel forgings, integrated into a weldment |
Cylinder head material | cast iron, one per cylinder |
Valvetrain | Intake ports in each cylinder liner, 4 exhaust valves in each cylinder head |
Compression ratio | 14.5:1 |
RPM range | |
Idle speed | 200 |
Max. engine speed | 950 |
Combustion | |
Supercharger | One or two Roots-type blower |
Turbocharger | Single, clutch driven |
Fuel system | Unit Injector |
Management | Mechanical (Woodward governor) |
Fuel type | Diesel |
Oil system | Forced lubrication system, Wet sump |
Cooling system | Liquid cooled |
Output | |
Power output | 750 to 4,200 hp (560 to 3,130 kW) |
Chronology | |
Predecessor | EMD 567 |
Successor | EMD 710 |
The EMD 645 is a family of two-stroke diesel engines that was designed and manufactured by the Electro-Motive Division of General Motors. While the 645 series was intended primarily for locomotive, marine and stationary engine use, one 16-cylinder version powered the 33-19 "Titan" prototype haul truck designed by GM's Terex division
The 645 series was an evolution of the earlier 567 series and a precursor to the later 710 series. First introduced in 1965, the EMD 645 series remained in production on a by-request basis long after it was replaced by the 710, and most 645 service parts are still in production. The EMD 645 engine series is currently supported by Electro-Motive Diesel, Inc., which purchased the assets of the Electro-Motive Division from General Motors in 2005.
In 1951, E. W. Kettering wrote a paper for the ASME entitled, History and Development of the 567 Series General Motors Locomotive Engine,[1] which goes into great detail about the technical obstacles that were encountered during the development of the 567 engine. These same considerations apply to the 645 and 710, as these engines were a logical extension of the 567C, by applying a cylinder bore increase, 645, and a cylinder bore increase and a stroke increase, 710, to achieve a greater power output, without changing the external size of the engines, or their weight, thereby achieving significant improvements in horsepower per unit volume and horsepower per unit weight.
Due to emissions restrictions these engines have been gradually phased out for the 4 stroke alternatives.
History
[edit]The 645 series engines entered production in 1965. As the 567 series had reached its limits in horsepower increases, a larger displacement was needed; this was accomplished by increasing the bore from 8+1⁄2 in (216 mm) on the 567 series to 9+1⁄16 in (230 mm) on the 645 series, while maintaining the same stroke and deck height. While the crankcase was modified from the 567 series, 567C and later engines (or 567 engines which have been modified to 567C specifications, sometimes referred to as 567AC or 567BC engines) can accept 645 series service parts, such as power assemblies. Conversely, the 567E engine employs a 645E series block with 567 series power assemblies.
All 645 engines utilize either a Roots blower or a turbocharger for cylinder scavenging. For turbocharged engines, the turbocharger is gear-driven and has an overrunning clutch that allows it to act as a centrifugal blower at low engine speeds (when exhaust gas flow and temperature alone are insufficient to drive the turbine) and a purely exhaust-driven turbocharger at higher speeds. The turbocharger can revert to acting as a supercharger during demands for large increases in engine output power. While more expensive to maintain than Roots blowers, EMD claims that this design allows "significantly" reduced fuel consumption and emissions, improved high-altitude performance, and even up to a 50 percent increase in maximum rated horsepower over Roots-blown engines for the same engine displacement.
Horsepower for naturally aspirated engines (including Roots-blown two-stroke engines) is usually derated 2.5 percent per 1,000 feet (300 m) above mean sea level, a tremendous penalty at the 10,000 feet (3,000 m) or greater elevations which several Western U.S. and Canada railroads operate, and this can amount to a 25 percent power loss. Turbocharging effectively eliminates this derating.
The 645 series has a maximum engine speed of between 900 and 950 revolutions per minute (rpm), an increase over the 800 to 900 rpm maximum speed for the 567 series. An engine speed of 900 rpm was essential for 60 Hz stationary power generator applications and certain passenger locomotives equipped with 60 Hz, 480-volt three-phase "head-end power" systems. When used solely for traction purposes, the engine speed varies depending on the throttle position. The 950 rpm maximum speed of the 645F engine proved to be too high, thereby compromising its reliability, and the replacement engine, the 710G, reverted to 900 rpm maximum speed.
EMD built an SD40 demonstrator (number 434) in July 1964 to field test the 16-645E3 engine, followed by another eight SD40 demonstrators (numbers 434A through 434H) and a GP40 demonstrator (number 433A) in 1965. In December 1965 and January 1966, EMD built three SD45 demonstrators (numbers 4351 through 4353) to field test the 20-645E3 engine.
When the 645 engine entered production in 1965, a large series of new locomotive models was introduced. The turbocharged version was used in EMD's 40 Series (GP40, SD40 and SD45) in 3,000 horsepower (2,200 kW), sixteen-cylinder form and in 3,600 horsepower (2,700 kW), twenty-cylinder form. EMD also introduced the Roots-blown 38 Series (GP38, SD38) and turbocharged, twelve-cylinder 39 Series (GP39, SD39). All of these locomotive models extensively share common components and subsystems, thereby significantly reducing cost and increasing interchangeability. The GP38-2 and SD40-2 became the most popular models of the series and among the most popular locomotive models ever built.[2]
Starting with the introduction of the 645 series engines, EMD's model naming convention generally increased model designs by ten (such as with the 40, 50, 60 and 70 series). The number was reduced by one for twelve-cylinder versions (such as the 39, 49 and 59 series); reduced by two for Roots-blown versions (for the 38 series); and increased by five for higher-horsepower versions (such as the 45 and 75 series).
Specifications (many are common to 567 and 710 engines)
[edit]All 645 engines are two-stroke 45-degree V-engines. Each cylinder is of 645 cubic inches (10.57 L) displacement, hence the name; with a bore of 9+1⁄16 inches (230 mm), a stroke of 10 inches (254 mm) and a compression ratio of 14.5:1. The engine is a uniflow design with four poppet-type exhaust valves in the cylinder head and charge air scavenging ports within the sides of the cylinders. All engines use a single overhead camshaft per bank, with exhaust valves operated by two cam lobes (each of which operates two exhaust valves through a "bridge") and one cam lobe to operate the Unit injector[3] which is in the center of the four exhaust valves. Rocker arms are roller-equipped to reduce friction while hydraulic valve actuators are used to reduce valve lash. Post-1995 710 engines employ Electronic Unit injectors, however these injectors still utilize a camshaft-actuated piston pump, as on non-EFI injectors.
Cylinders in each V-pair are directly opposite each other, and the connecting rods are of a fork-and-blade arrangement, with "fork" rods on one bank of cylinders and "blade" rods on the other (with the same stroke on both banks). (In contrast, General Electric's 7FDL and 7FDM engines use "articulated" master-and-slave connecting rods, essentially two adjacent cylinders on a radial engine, and have a slightly longer stroke on the bank using slave rods.)[note 1] The engines are provided with either a single or twin Roots blower, or a single mechanically-assisted turbocharger, depending on required power output.
For maintenance, a power assembly, consisting of a cylinder head, cylinder liner, piston, piston carrier and piston rod can be individually replaced relatively easily and quickly. The engine block is made from flat, formed and rolled structural steel members and steel forgings welded into a single structure (a "weldment"), so it can easily be repaired using conventional shop tools.
- Orientation: The "front" of the engine (the engine governor and fluid pump end) is actually at the rear end of the locomotive, immediately adjacent to the locomotive's coolant supply and cooling system; the "rear" of the engine (the induction system and traction generator or alternator end) is at the front end of the locomotive, immediately adjacent to the locomotive's electrical cabinet.
- Rotation: Engine rotation is in the conventional clockwise direction, as viewed from the "front" of the engine, but is in a counterclockwise direction, as viewed from the front of the locomotive. Marine and stationary installations are available with either a left or a right-hand rotating engine.
- Firing order
- Exhaust valves: Four per cylinder
- Main bearings
- Eight cylinder: 5 (one-piece crankshaft)
- Twelve cylinder: 7 (one-piece crankshaft)
- Sixteen cylinder: 10 (two-piece crankshaft, pinned and bolted in the middle)
- Twenty cylinder: 12 (two-piece crankshaft, pinned and bolted in the middle)
- Fuel injection: Unit injector; Electronic unit injector in post-1995 engines
- Engine starting
- AC traction generator: Dual electric starting motors, parallel-connected 64 volt starters in early applications, series-connected 32 volt starters in late applications
- DC traction generator: Generator series field
- AC power generator: Dual pneumatic starters in most stationary engine applications
- Engine Control
- Woodward PGE locomotive governor, or equivalent, in mechanical engines; EMD engine control unit in electronic engines
- Weight (E3B turbocharged models)
- Eight cylinder: 22,050 pounds (10.0 tonnes)
- Twelve cylinder: 28,306 pounds (12.8 tonnes)
- Sixteen cylinder: 36,425 pounds (16.5 tonnes)
- Twenty cylinder: 43,091 pounds (19.5 tonnes)
Versions
[edit]ID | Cylinders | Induction | Rated RPM | Power (hp) | Power (MW) | Introduced | Applications |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
8-645C[note 6] | 8 | Blower (1) | 900 | 1100 | 0.8 | 1965 | G18AR, New Zealand DBR class |
6-645E | 6 | Blower (1) | 900 | 750 | 0.6 | 1967 | Victorian Railways Y class (G6B) |
8-645E | 8 | Blower (1) | 900 | 1000 | 0.75 | 1966 | SW1000, SW1001, V/Line P class, Victorian Railways T class (3rd series) / H class, CIE 201 Class (rebuilt), Renfe Class 310 |
12-645E | 12 | Blower (2) | 900 | 1500 | 1.1 | 1966 | MP15DC,[4] MP15AC, G22, SW1500, SW1504, GP15-1, GP15AC, CIE 001 Class (rebuilt), Commonwealth Railways NJ class, MV Liberty Star, SJ Class T44 |
16-645E | 16 | Blower (2) | 900 | 2000 | 1.5 | 1966 | GP38, GP38-2, SD38, SDP38, SD38-2, NSWGR 422 Class, Victorian Railways X class (2nd & 3rd series), G26, Renfe Class 319 |
8-645E3 | 8 | Turbocharger | 900 | 1650 | 1.2 | MP15T, FGC 254 Series | |
12-645C | 12 | Blower (2) | 900 | 1650 | 1.2 | G22AR, New Zealand DC class | |
12-645E3 | 12 | Turbocharger | 900 | 2300 | 1.7 | 1968 | GP39, GP39-2, SD39, SDL39, CIE 071, GT22, British Rail Class 57/0 & 57601 |
16-645E3 | 16 | Turbocharger | 900 | 3000 | 2.2 | 1965 | GP40, GP40-2, GP40P, GP40P-2, GP40TC, SD40, SD40A, SD40-2, SD40T-2, SDP40, SDP40F, F40PH, Commonwealth Railways CL class (Original), Australian National AL class (Original), WAGR L class, VR C Class, GT26CW, DSB Class MZ (series I–II)[5] |
20-645E3 | 20 | Turbocharger | 900 | 3600 | 2.7 | 1965 | SD45, SD45-2, SDP45, F45, FP45, DDM45, DSB Class MZ (series III–IV)[5] |
16-645E3A | 16 | Turbocharger | 950 | 3300 | 2.5 | 1969 | DDA40X (dual engine), Renfe Class 333 |
20-645E3A | 20 | Turbocharger | 950 | 4200 | 3.1 | 1970 | SD45X |
8-645E3B | 8 | Turbocharger | 904 | 1514-1666 | 1.1-1.2 | Proposed | |
12-645E3B | 12 | Turbocharger | 904 | 2380-2570 | 1.8-1.9 | JT22CW, V/Line A class, V/Line N class (2nd series), | |
16-645E3B | 16 | Turbocharger | 904 | 3195-3390 | 2.4-2.5 | F40C, New South Wales 81 class locomotive, Australian National BL class, V/Line G class (original), NSB Di 4, DSB Class ME,[5] M62M Rail Polska | |
20-645E3B | 20 | Turbocharger | 904 | 3765-3960 | 2.8-3.0 | SD45T-2 | |
8-645E3C | 8 | Turbocharger | 904 | 1500 | 1.1 | GP15T[6] | |
12-645E3C | 12 | Turbocharger | 900 | 2510 | 1.8 | V/Line N class (1st series), New Zealand DFT class, Queensland Railways 2300 class | |
16-645E3C | 16 | Turbocharger | 950 | 3300 | 2.5 | British Rail Class 59, V/Line G class (original), Pacific National XRB class, Freight Australia XR class, VL class (Australia), Commonwealth Railways CL class (rebuilt versions), Australian National ALF class, TCDD DE33000, F40PH-2, SD40E, Henschel DE3300 | |
16-645E4 | 16 | Turbocharger | 900 | 3300 | 2.46 | 1973 | Terex 33-19 "Titan" haul truck[7] |
16-645F | 16 | Turbocharger | 950 | 3500 | 2.6 | 1977 | GP40X, GP50, SD40X, SD50 |
12-645F3B | 12 | Turbocharger | 950 | 2800 | 2.1 | GP49, British Rail Class 57/3 & 57602-57605 | |
16-645F3B | 16 | Turbocharger | 950 | 3600 | 2.7 | EMD FT36HCW-2-Korail 7000 Series; MPI MPXpress MP36PH-3S and -3C, RL class, V/Line G class (rebuilt) |
Stationary/marine versions
[edit]Like most EMD engines, the 645 is also sold for stationary and marine applications.
Stationary and marine installations are available with either a left or right-hand rotating engine.
Marine engines differ from railroad and stationary engines mainly in the shape and depth of the engine's oil sump, which has been altered to accommodate the rolling and pitching motions encountered in marine applications.
Engine Speed
- Full . . 900 RPM for 60 Hz power generation; 750 RPM for 50 Hz power generation; variable up to 900 RPM for marine applications
- Idle . . 350 RPM
- Compression Ratio . . 16:1
Brake Horsepower (ABS Rating)
- Model 645E6 Engines - 900 RPM
- 8-cylinder . . . .1050
- 12-cylinder . . . 1500
- 16-cylinder . . . 1950
- Model 645E7C/F7B Engines - 800 RPM / 900 RPM
- 8-cylinder . . . . ---- / 1525
- 12-cylinder . . . .2305 / 2550
- 16-cylinder . . . .3070 / 3400
- 20-cylinder . . . .3600 / 4000
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ Service power assemblies are available from EMD, and from competitors, as "Fork", "Blade", and "Partial" (neither "Fork" nor "Blade"), P/N 40173918.
- ^ Even firing: an ignition event every 45 degrees of crankshaft rotation; directly opposite pairs of cylinders always fire 45° apart.
- ^ Odd firing: ideally, an ignition event would occur every 30° of crankshaft rotation; however, each pair of cylinders always fires 45° apart. As a result, the firing intervals alternate between 45° and 15°.
- ^ Even firing: an ignition event every 22.5° of crankshaft rotation. Since each pair of cylinders always fires 45° apart, the engine fires in a right-right-left-left fashion.
- ^ Odd firing: To achieve even firing, the firing intervals must be 18°. However, each pair of cylinders always fire 45° apart. As a result, the firing intervals alternate between 9° and 27°.
- ^ 8-645C engines were 8-567C engines which were updated with 645 "power assemblies"; normally a 645 engine employs an E or F block and their designation is 645E or 645F; the 567 engine has a significantly different oil sump and frame mounting than the later 645 or 710 engine, hence a "645C" engine is a hybrid, possibly rated as a 645 engine, but physically more like an earlier 567 engine
References
[edit]- ^ Kettering, E.W. (November 29, 1951). History and Development of the 567 Series General Motors Locomotive Engine. ASME 1951 Annual Meeting. Atlantic City, New Jersey: Electro-Motive Division, General Motors Corporation.
- ^ Foster, Gerald (1996). A Field Guide to Trains. Boston, New York: Houghton Mifflin Company.
- ^ U.S. 1,981,913
- ^ "MP15 Locomotives". GATX. Archived from the original on December 18, 2012. Retrieved January 26, 2013.
- ^ a b c Christensen, Peter; John Poulsen (1999). Motor Materiel 5: Med motor fra GM (in Danish). bane bøger. p. 100. ISBN 87-88632-79-2.
- ^ EMD GP15T Operator's Manual (1st ed.). Electro-Motive Division. 1982. Retrieved September 2, 2023.
- ^ "Terex 33-19 Hauler Form No. GMD 1946". Canada: Terex Division of General Motors Corporation. December 1974. p. 1. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 11, 2012. Retrieved August 30, 2010.
Gross HP @ 900 RPM ... 3300
External links
[edit]- Houk, Randy (December 14, 2012). "The History of EMD Diesel Engines". Pacific Southwest Railway Museum. Archived from the original on July 22, 2014. Retrieved January 5, 2015.
- Cook, Preston (April 2010). "The Electro-Motive 645 Diesel Engine" (PDF). Railfan & Railroad: 40–47. ISSN 0163-7266. Retrieved June 15, 2016.
- Cook, Preston (2007). "History of the EMD 645 and 710". Tugboat Enthusiasts Society of the Americas. Archived from the original on March 29, 2016. Retrieved June 15, 2016.