A railroad slug is an accessory to a diesel-electric locomotive. A Diesel locomotive is a type of Railroad Locomotive in which the prime mover is a Diesel engine. It has trucks with traction motors but is unable to move about under its own power, as it does not contain a prime mover to produce electricity. A bogie (ˈboʊgi (BŌ-gē is a Wheeled wagon or trolley In mechanics terms a bogie is a Chassis or framework carrying wheels attached to a vehicle See also Electric vehicle, Electric motor A traction motor is a type of Electric motor used to power the driving wheels of a vehicle such as Instead, it is connected to a locomotive, called the mother, which provides current to operate the traction motors.
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Slugs are used in situations where high tractive effort is more important than motive power, such as switching operations in yards. At low speeds, a diesel-electric locomotive prime mover can produce more electric power than its traction motors can use effectively. Tractive Effort (abbr TE is the pulling force exerted normally by a Locomotive, though the term could also be used for anything else that pulls a load In Thermodynamics, motive power is an agency as Water or Steam, used to impart motion. A switcher or shunter ( Great Britain: shunter; Australia: shunter or yard pilot; USA: switcher (or A ( US and Canada) classification yard or ( UK and Canada) marshalling yard (including hump yards) is a Railroad A Diesel locomotive is a type of Railroad Locomotive in which the prime mover is a Diesel engine. Extra power would simply cause the wheels to slip and possibly overheat the traction motors. A slug increases the number of traction motors available to the locomotive, increasing both the pulling and braking power. Slugs carry ballast to increase their weight and improve traction. Large blocks of concrete are frequently used for this purpose, substituting for the weight of the now-absent prime mover. Concrete is a construction material composed of Cement (commonly Portland cement) as well as other cementitious materials such as Fly ash and Slag
Slugs can be built new or converted from existing locomotives. Conversion has enjoyed popularity as a way to reuse otherwise obsolete locomotives.
There are two types of slug, distinguished by intended use. Note that as with diesel locomotives in general, this division is not absolute, and characteristics of one type may appear on the other.
A yard slug is designed for switching, and therefore is built to increase visibility in low speed operation. It has a low body and no cab, allowing the engineer or driver in the powered unit to see past it.
Road slugs are intended to serve as part of a regular locomotive consist for road haulage, and as a result have certain adaptations to suit them for this service. They usually retain dynamic brakes, a feature useless at the low speeds encountered in switching service, and they may be equipped to serve as fuel tenders for the attached "mother" locomotives. Dynamic braking is the use of the electric Traction motors of a Railroad vehicle as generators when slowing the vehicle
In operation, they are used to provide extra traction at low speeds. As speed increases they are disconnected from the power circuit and function as a control cab if they are in the lead, or simply as an unpowered car in the consist. A control car is a generic term for a non-powered railroad vehicle that can control operation of a train from the end opposite to the position of the Locomotive. In braking they augment the powered locomotives, both during dynamic and air brake application.
Road slugs may take several forms. A group of GP30 and GP35 locomotives were converted by CSX and operated as half of "mother-slug" pairs. An EMD GP35 is a 4-axle diesel Locomotive built by General Motors Electro-Motive Division between July 1963 and January 1966. Externally they retain the general appearance of powered diesel-electric locomotives, though they can be identified by the lack of radiators and the removal of most of the access doors on the side of the body. Radiators and convectors are types of Heat exchangers designed to transfer Thermal energy from one medium to another for the purpose of cooling They retain the cab and its controls, and therefore multiple unit control allows them to function as the lead in a string of units. The TEBU units created on the Southern Pacific Railroad from General Electric U25Bs, on the other hand, were cabless; this potential operational deficiency was compensated for by putting them as the center unit of a set of three. Introduced in 1960 the GE U25B was General Electric 's first independent entry into the United States domestic Diesel-electric Railroad BNSF Railway has a number of road slugs that were converted from old GP7 and GP9 locomotives, retaining their cabs and high short hoods, but with their long hoods cut down. The BNSF Railway headquartered in Fort Worth, Texas, is one of the four remaining Transcontinental railroads and one of the largest railroad networks in The EMD GP7 is a four-axle diesel-electric Locomotive built by General Motors Electro-Motive Division and General Motors Diesel between October 1949 An EMD GP9 is a four-axle diesel Locomotive built by General Motors' Electro-Motive Division in the United States and General Motors Diesel in Canada between
When at one end of a set, locomotive crews will often go to great lengths to arrange for the slug to be the leading unit, as the lack of a diesel prime mover provides them with a quiet and vibration-free ride.
Slugs are known by other names as well. Some are:
The CCRCLs (Control Car Remote Control Locomotives) used by Union Pacific are sometimes called slugs. A Control Car Remote Control Locomotive ( CCRCL) is an old Diesel locomotive with Remote control equipment installed This designation is incorrect as the CCRCLs do not have traction motors.
Slugs should also not be confused with snails, a term sometimes used to refer to the power source of a rotary snowplow. A rotary snowplow is a piece of Railroad snowfighting equipment
See also Cow-calf. In North American Railroading a cow-calf set is a pair of Switcher -type Diesel locomotives one (the cow) equipped with a driving cab