Cold Steam Engine: Difference between revisions
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The October 1949 issue of <i>Model Railroader</i> magazine contains an article about a very unusual live steam, or rather, cold steam locomotive. The system described was developed by Emil Vollenweider of Sacramento, California. | |||
The photos below show an O scale locomotive modified to operate off the CO2 gas emitted by melting dry ice. The ice is placed in a sealed reservoir in the tender. A pipe leads to the locomotive where a valve controls the flow of pressurized gas to the cylinders. The valve is controlled by an electric motorized mechanism, connected to the two-rail track. The output from the valve flows into a small equalizing tank hidden inside the boiler, and then to the left and right cylinders. | |||
<gallery widths="300px" heights="300px"> | <gallery widths="300px" heights="300px"> |
Revision as of 23:24, 5 July 2013
The October 1949 issue of Model Railroader magazine contains an article about a very unusual live steam, or rather, cold steam locomotive. The system described was developed by Emil Vollenweider of Sacramento, California.
The photos below show an O scale locomotive modified to operate off the CO2 gas emitted by melting dry ice. The ice is placed in a sealed reservoir in the tender. A pipe leads to the locomotive where a valve controls the flow of pressurized gas to the cylinders. The valve is controlled by an electric motorized mechanism, connected to the two-rail track. The output from the valve flows into a small equalizing tank hidden inside the boiler, and then to the left and right cylinders.