enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Greenwood & Batley - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greenwood_&_Batley

    Greenbat battery-electric locomotive 6061 (built 1961) at Steeple Grange Light Railway. Greenwood & Batley were a large engineering manufacturer with a wide range of products, including armaments, electrical engineering, and printing and milling machinery. They also produced a range of battery-electric railway locomotives under the brand name ...

  3. Battery electric multiple unit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battery_electric_multiple_unit

    The latter headed the Railway Storage Battery Car Company and the Electric Car & Locomotive Corp. [57] Car No. 105 of the Alaska Railroad was an Edison-Beach car, [58] and examples operated on the Central Vermont Railway running between Millers Falls, Northfield and West Townshend. [59] A notable feature of the Edison-Beach cars was the Beach ...

  4. Wabtec FLXDrive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wabtec_FLXDrive

    Using a modified version of the GE Evolution Series platform, FLXdrive is Wabtec's first zero-emissions locomotive, storing energy in 20 racks of lithium-ion battery cells. [1] FLXDrive is a hybrid-electric locomotive, meaning it works in conjunction with traditional diesel-electric locomotives to provide regenerative braking for a train. The ...

  5. London Underground battery–electric locomotives - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/London_Underground_battery...

    LT battery-electric locomotives at Croxley Tip, 1971. In 1936, the decision was taken to purchase a batch of new battery locomotives, and an order was placed with the Gloucester Railway Carriage & Wagon Company for nine vehicles, six of which would be fitted with GEC traction control equipment, while the other three would be fitted with ...

  6. Electric locomotive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electric_locomotive

    The first electric locomotive built in 1837 was a battery locomotive. It was built by chemist Robert Davidson of Aberdeen in Scotland , and it was powered by galvanic cells (batteries). Another early example was at the Kennecott Copper Mine , McCarthy, Alaska , wherein 1917 the underground haulage ways were widened to enable working by two ...

  7. Altoona Works BP4 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Altoona_Works_BP4

    The Altoona Works BP4 is a 1,500 hp (1,120 kW) B-B battery-electric locomotive rebuilt by the Altoona Works of the Norfolk Southern Railway.It was created in 2007 by replacing the diesel prime mover of an EMD GP38 (Norfolk Southern #2911, formerly Conrail #7732) with 1,080 12-volt lead-acid batteries and associated control equipment.

  8. Category:Battery electric locomotives - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Battery_electric...

    Battery locomotive; B. Battery electric multiple unit; F. FS Class E.421; L. London Underground battery–electric locomotives; N. New Zealand E class locomotive (1922)

  9. Railway electric traction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Railway_electric_traction

    Robert Davidson, of Aberdeen, Scotland, created an electric locomotive in 1839 and ran it on the Edinburgh-Glasgow railway at 4 miles per hour. [1] The earliest electric locomotives tended to be battery-powered. [1] In 1880, Thomas Edison built a small electrical railway, using a dynamo as the motor and the rails as the current-carrying medium.