British Rail 18100


British Rail 18100 was a prototype main line gas turbine-electric locomotive built for British Railways in 1951 by Metropolitan-Vickers, Manchester. It had, however, been ordered by the Great Western Railway in the 1940s, but construction was delayed due to World War II. It spent its working life on the Western Region of British Railways, operating express passenger services from Paddington station, London.

Overview

It was of Co-Co wheel arrangement and its gas turbine was rated at. It had a maximum speed of and weighed. It was painted in BR black livery, with a silver stripe around the middle of the body and silver numbers.

Technical details

The gas turbine was of a type which would now be called a turboshaft engine but it differed from modern free-turbine turboshaft engines in having only one turbine to drive both the compressor and the output shaft. It was based on aircraft practice and had six horizontal combustion chambers and no heat exchanger.
The emphasis was on power, rather than economy, and the fuel consumption was high. It was designed to use aviation kerosene and was much more expensive to run than No. 18000, which used heavy fuel oil. The turbine drove, through reduction gearing:
Each main generator powered two traction motors. Unlike No. 18000, there was no auxiliary diesel engine and the turbine was started by battery power, using the main generators as starter motors.

Comparison of 18000 and 18100

The following table gives a comparison between 18000 and 18100. There are some anomalies and these are described in the notes.
Value1800018100Notes
Weight 115129-
Turbine horsepower10,3009,000
Power absorbed by compressor7,8006,000
Output horsepower2,5003,000
Number of traction motors46-
Total traction motor horsepower2,5002,450
Starting tractive effort 31,50060,000

Notes:
  1. In 18000, output horsepower is 24% of total horsepower and in 18100, output horsepower is 33% of total horsepower. This suggests that 18100 had the higher thermal efficiency but, in practice, 18000 had the higher thermal efficiency. The horsepower figures should, therefore, be regarded with some scepticism.
  2. Where electric transmission is used, the horsepower of the traction motors is usually 81% that of the prime mover. The figure for 18100 is therefore about right but the figure for 18000 looks anomalous.

    Conversion

In early 1958 it was withdrawn from operation and was stored at Swindon Works for a short period before it was returned to Metropolitan Vickers for conversion as a prototype 25 kV AC electric locomotive. As an electric locomotive, it was numbered E1000 and was given the TOPS classification of class 80.

Models

18100 is being made as a kit and ready-to-run in OO gauge by Silver Fox Models.