Aerotrain

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Aerotrain
The first Aerotrain, General Motors Electro-Motive Division's experimental super-lightweight streamlined train set at EMD’s facility in La Grange, Illinois.[1] The first Aerotrain, General Motors Electro-Motive Division's experimental super-lightweight streamlined train set at EMD’s facility in La Grange, Illinois.[1]
Model LWT12 [2]
Power type Diesel-electric
Geographic market(s) United States
Original purchaser(s) Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway
Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad
New York Central Railroad
Pennsylvania Railroad
Union Pacific Railroad
Designer General Motors Design
(Charles M. "Chuck" Jordan)
Builder General Motors Electro-Motive Division
Period produced 1956 [3]
Total produced 3 locomotives / 2 train sets [2]
Status Preserved (2 train sets in museums)
Weight 175,000 lb [4]
AAR wheel arrangement Bo-1
Gauge 4 ft 8½ in (1,435 mm)
Prime mover EMD 12-567C [5]
Engine type 2-stroke diesel
Power output 1,200 hp (890 kW) [2]
Cylinders V12 [2]
Cylinder size 8.5 in × 10 in. (216 mm × 254 mm)
Displacement 6,804 in³ (111.5 l)
Aspiration Normally-aspirated
Transmission DC generator, DC traction motors
Rated top speed 102 mph (162 km/h) [4]
Locomotive brake Straight air / dynamic
Train brakes Air


The Aerotrain is a streamlined trainset introduced by General Motors' Electro-Motive Division in the mid-1950s. It utilized the experimental EMD LWT12 locomotive (essentially a standard EMD SW1200 switcher engine geared for high-speed passenger service and "wrapped in an aerodynamic shell"), coupled to a set of modified General Motors 40-seat intercity bus coach bodies. The cars each rode on two axles with an airbag suspension system, which was intended to give a smooth ride but in practice had the opposite effect. The Aerotrain was (in its day) one of the few trains that had ever been designed as a single unit, including the locomotive.

History

Background

By 1952, American railroads were losing an estimated $700,000 in annual passenger service revenues to air and bus lines, as well as the increasing popularity of the automobile.[6][7] This development drove several railroad companies' attempts to effectively "reinvent" streamlining (considered to be a major revolution in American passenger train travel in the 1930s) in order to reduce equipment investment, operating, and maintenance costs.[8] To achieve these ends the center of gravity was lowered (when compared to state-of-the-art passenger rolling stock) which allowed the trains to operate at higher speeds over existing tracks. As an additional cost-saving measure, existing components were to be used wherever possible. It was hoped that these measures would allow the railroads to be competitive in the medium-distance (200-700 mile) market.

Development

Image General Motors Electro-Motive Division
HERE COMES TOMORROW --- FAST!
A promotional advertisement for GM's Aerotrain as appeared in the December 10, 1955 issue of the Saturday Evening Post.
© Photo: GM Aerotrain interior.jpg
A standard 40-passenger, 40-foot bus body was widened by 18" to provide more seating area for Aerotrain passengers.
© Photo: General Motors Electro-Motive Division
The observation car of GM Aerotrain demonstrator No. 1001.

GM's Aerotrain, touted as the "lightweight with a heavyweight future," was the best-known of the postwar experimental streamliners.[3] Following closely on the heels of Pullman-Standard's super-lightweight, articulated "Talgo" train, EMD produced a total of 3 demonstrator units, designated Model LWT12 (for "lightweight, 1,200 horsepower"). The units' automobile styling cues were the work of GM's Special Projects Studio. The unique "turret-cab" car body design was included multiple headlights, a wrap-around windshield, and contrasting color sweep-spear side trim.[9] Modified intercity bus car bodies turned out at GM's Truck & Coach Division in Pontiac, Michigan were used as the basis for the passenger cars, which featured wrap-around back windows and prehensile tail fins on the observation cars.

Forty-foot-long aluminum bus bodies, normally manufactured in two four-foot-wide sections joined together, had an 18"-wide strip added up the center to increase the coach's spaciousness. The coaches weighed in at 16 tons each, compared to a 65-ton standard railroad coach that typically seated far fewer than 80 passengers.[9] Since the cars were not articulated, consists could be (relatively) easily adjusted in order to meet travel demands.[3] Aerotrain coaches rode on 33" diameter wheels and measured 9'-6" wide by 10'-9" high with a center of gravity 45" above the rails, whereas conventional cars rode on 36" diameter wheels and measured 10'-0" wide by 13'-6" high with a center of gravity 55" above the rails.[10] Each car sat atop 8 synthetic rubber bellows (two situated above each of the four wheels) which maintained the specified floor height at 43" above the rails, the same height as in a regular streamlined passenger car despite the lower overall coach height. Each car was equipped with 20 double-reclining seats, plus sections containing lavatories and small compartments that could be utilized for the preparation or serving of food.[11]

The Aerotrain is not a luxury train, but a coach train designed as one approach to the solutions of the serious economic problem railroads face in their passenger train operations...the major objective of the Aerotrain is to provide the utmost in speed, safety, and comfort at the least possible cost.[12]

The two demonstrator units cost about $1,000,000 each, including design costs.[13] It was estimated that the train sets could be produced for $400,000 to $500,000 each if produced in volume. The cars themselves cost $40,000 each (or $1,000 per seat) which compared favorably to the $2,200-per-seat cost of a standard passenger car.

In service

The two Aerotrain demonstrator sets, consisting of 1 locomotive (EMD serial numbers 21463 and 21464) and 10 cars each, logged over 600,000 miles (970,000 kilometers) on five different railroads.[14] In February, 1956 the Pennsylvania Railroad leased Aerotrain No. 1000 (or T1) and operated the Pennsy Aerotrain between New York City and Pittsburgh until June, then between Pittsburgh and Philadelphia through June of the following year. The Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway ran Aerotrain No. 1001 (or T2) on its "Surf Line" route between Los Angeles and San Diego as one of its San Diegans beginning in March 1956. Its use was soon discontinued because the trainset had to be turned after each trip and required helper locomotives on the Sorrento Grade north of San Diego. No. 1001 was then leased to the New York Central Railroad as a demonstrator and operated as the Great Lakes Aerotrain between Cleveland and Chicago on the former Lake Shore Limited route. In the summer of 1957 the train was operated by the Union Pacific Railroad as the City of Las Vegas running between Los Angeles and Las Vegas. By the end of 1957 both units had been sold to the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad at a substantial discount, where the trains operated in Chicago commuter service until they were retired from service in 1966. GM's president, Harlow H. Curtice, summed up the endeavor as follows:

[The company] has no intention of going into the railroad passenger-car-building business. It is primarily interested in the promotion of the use of its diesel motive power and presents the new cars as a service to its customers.

Despite intentions to the contrary, even routine maintenance on the locomotive section was extremely difficult and time-consuming. And, rather than cushioning the ride, the air suspension system literally "beat passengers to death." Finally, the trains proved difficult to integrate into railroad operations. In the end, either the Aerotrain nor its postwar brethren succeeded in capturing the imagination of the American public.

Disposition

Today, Aerotrain No. 1000 (now designated as train set No. 2) resides at the National Railroad Museum in Green Bay, Wisconsin, while Aerotrain No. 1001 (now designated as train set No. 3) is on permanent display at the Museum of Transportation in Saint Louis, Missouri.[15]

Legacy

Disneyland operated a scale version of the Aerotrain, known as the Viewliner, from 1957 to 1958. Since 1958, the Washington Park and Zoo Railway in Portland, Oregon has operated a scale, diesel-powered replica of the Aerotrain (dubbed the Zooliner) to transport zoo patrons along a one-mile route around the perimeter of the zoo grounds.

Notes and references

  1. (CC) Photo: TrainWeb.com
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Pinkepank, p. 127
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Schafer, p. 142
  4. 4.0 4.1 Hicks, p. 85
  5. Pacific Southwest Railway Museum
  6. Hicks, p. 81
  7. $700,000 equates to approximately $6,170,00 in 2013.
  8. Sherlock: In the early 1930s, rail passenger ridership declined by some 41% as a direct result of the Great Depression.
  9. 9.0 9.1 Sherlock
  10. Hicks, p. 84
  11. Hicks, p. 83: The two prototype trains had no specific provisions for food service en route.
  12. Nelson Dezendorf, GM’s Electro-Motive Division vice-president in 1955.
  13. Hicks, p. 86
  14. Schafer, p. 142: A third locomotive (EMD serial number 20826) was built to power the Rock Island's "Talgo"-style Jet Rocket streamliner between Chicago and Peoria, Illinois.
  15. Schafer, p. 159