Russian locomotive class TE2

The TE2 (Cyrillic script: ТЭ2) is a class of Soviet diesel-electric locomotives built by Malyshev Factory in Ukraine from 1948 to 1955. It is nominally a two-unit version of class TE1 (ТЭ1) but is very different in appearance. While the TE1 is a Co-Co hood unit, the TE2 is a Bo-Bo+Bo-Bo cab unit.[1]

TE2 or ТЭ2
TE2-414 at the Museum of Railway Technology,
Saint Petersburg
Type and origin
Power typeDiesel-electric
BuilderKharkov, Ukraine
Build datePrototypes: 1948-1949
Series-built: 1950-1955
Specifications
Configuration:
  UICBo-Bo+Bo-Bo
Wheel diameter1,050 mm (41.34 in)
Length2 x 11,948 mm (39 ft 2 38 in)
Loco weight2 x 83.25 t (81.94 long tons; 91.77 short tons)
Prime mover2 x Penza D50
RPM rangeMax. 740 rpm
Engine type4-stroke 6 cylinder supercharged diesels
TransmissionDiesel-electric
8 x 152 kW d.c. traction motors
Gear ratio 4.69:1
Performance figures
Maximum speed93 km/h (58 mph)
Power outputDiesel: 2 x 736 kW (987 hp; 1,001 PS)
Tractive effort2 x 246 kN (55,000 lbf)
Career
Number in class527
Numbers: 001-527

Powertrain

Each of the two units is powered by a 736 kW (987 hp; 1,001 PS) Penza D50 4-stroke 6 cylinder supercharged diesel engine and has four 152 kW (204 hp; 207 PS) DC traction motors.

Production

Prototypes were built in 1948 and 1949 and series production ran from 1950 to 1955.[2] A total of 528 pairs was built.[2] Each pair carried a single number in the range 001 to 528.[2]

Preservation

TE2-414 is preserved at the Museum of Railway Technology, Saint Petersburg.

TE4

The TE4 (ТЭ4) was an experimental modification of a TE2, designed to run on solid fuel by using a producer gas system. The gas generator was mounted on a four-axle non-powered unit, placed between the TE2 power units, making a wheel arrangement of Bo-Bo+2-2+Bo-Bo. It was not a success and was converted back to a TE2. See ТЭ4 at the Russian-language Wikipedia.

TE6

The TE6 (ТЭ6) was a class of sixteen TE2-type locomotives ordered by the Ministry of Defence in 1952. They were single-section and their purpose was to serve as locomotives or mobile alternating current generators.[2] They were designed to "meet the requirements of protection against injury factors of a nuclear explosion". ТЭ6

gollark: That could never go wrong!
gollark: What if you give everyone brain implants which tie their concept of happiness to serving The State™?
gollark: With guns! That's how it always worked.
gollark: "I could harvest 50% more crops on this communal farm if I worked harder, but I get food anyway."
gollark: It removes incentive to do things.

References

  1. Heywood, A.J.; Button, I.D.C. (1995). Soviet Locomotive Types. Malmo: Frank Stenvalls Forlag. p. 44. ISBN 9172661321.
  2. Rakov (1995), p. 379-381.
  • Rakov, Vitaliy (1995). Lokomotivy otechestvennyh zheleznyh dorog 1845-1955 [Locomotives of domestic railways 1845-1955] (in Russian). Moscow. ISBN 5-277-00821-7.


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