Engine No. 4901, a newly repaired electric locomotive pictured at Baltimore's Penn Station, is being tested on MARC's Penn Line. A glitch has troubled the fleet of 23-year-old AEM-7 locomotives for much of hte past three years, disrupting service. (Baltimore Sun photo by Kenneth K. Lam / October 7, 2009) |
Terry Schindler, Amtrak's deputy chief mechanical officer, said the railroad expects to return a second locomotive to the MTA by early next week. He said Amtrak believes it has found a way to repair an electrical problem that had sidelined MARC's 23-year-old fleet of AEM-7 locomotives and hopes to deliver the remaining two to MARC before the end of the year.
"I think we've hit on a positive fix here," Schindler said. "It's taken us much too long to get to this point."
A shortage of electric locomotives has been the main reason that MARC has been forced to run short, crowded trains on the Penn Line in recent months. When too few electric locomotives are available, MARC has to substitute less-powerful diesel engines that can pull fewer cars. The locomotive shortage also leaves the system vulnerable to breakdowns that have forced train cancellations.
A spokesman for the Maryland Department of Transportation confirmed that the MTA has received one engine from Amtrak. He said MARC has put that engine through two rounds of testing and that so far it has passed. It underwent a third phase of testing - pulling a scheduled Penn Line train with a second locomotive as backup - Wednesday evening and could return to full service as early as next week if it passes two more tests.
"The phrase 'cautiously optimistic' is one you will hear repeatedly from us," said spokesman Jack Cahalan.
The MARC fleet of locomotives is made up of 35 engines - 10 electric and 25 diesel-powered - that haul trains on the Penn, Camden and Brunswick lines.
The electric locomotives, which can be used only on the Amtrak-owned Penn Line, are more powerful and can pull trains with more cars, but in recent years they have shown greater fragility, contributing to frequent service problems.
Of MARC's 10 electric locomotives, four are AEM-7s that came on line in 1986. The remaining six are HHP-8 models (known as Hippos) that were put into service in 2003. Amtrak maintains the locomotives under a contract with the MTA.
In 2006, MARC began a cycle of midlife overhauls of the AEM-7s that was originally expected to take 18 months, Cahalan said, but workers at the Amtrak repair yard in Wilmington uncovered problems that added 11 months to the expected downtime, Cahalan said.
The two AEM-7s that went into the shop in 2006 were returned to MARC in October 2008 and January 2009. But those locomotives were soon found to have a puzzling electrical glitch that led to frequent breakdowns. They were returned to the Amtrak repair yard last spring and remained there through the summer alongside two other MARC AEM-7s as technicians struggled to find a fix to the electrical malfunction.
Schindler said one complication was the difficulty of procuring compatible spare parts for switches that were made during the 1980s. He said Amtrak, which has 20 AEM-7s of its own, had to scout world markets to find a company that would manufacture the parts to its specifications. Once Amtrak received the initial replacement components, Schindler said, MARC's locomotives were scheduled to be the first to receive them.
"They're at the front of the line," he said.
To operate its Penn Line schedule at full capacity, MARC needs a minimum of four electric locomotives to be fit for service, Cahalan said. But in recent months, he said, there have been times when it couldn't muster that many and had to replace them with diesels, which pull fewer cars.
MARC's diesel fleet is more than 30 years old and due for replacement with 26 modern diesel locomotives - the first of which had been expected to go into service this summer. But their debut was delayed by a dispute with the manufacturer over safety certifications - an impasse that was resolved last month. If no problems arise in certification or testing, Cahalan said, the MTA expects to deploy the first two new diesel engines by the end of this year and to add two per month next year.
If the AEM-7s are returned to service as predicted and the delivery of new diesels picks up, MARC could be operating a substantially transformed fleet by late 2010.
Rafael Guroian, MARC Riders Advisory Committee chairman, expressed cautious hope about the return of the locomotives.
"I'm glad to hear that they think they've found the fix. Of course, they thought they found the fix before," he said.

Digg
Twitter
Facebook
StumbleUpon
It's really annoying to hear people complain about MARC when it has vastly improved over the past few years espscially in terms of customer service. Most people here, except for people like ahblid, don't know anything about railroad equipment. The reason the new diesels aren't running had nothing to do with the MTA, but the manufacturer and a FRA requirement.
"Leasing locomotives is a good idea for the short term, but in a day/age of 'carbon' responsibility, I'm hoping they are considering more electric locomotives. While more initially expensive, electrics last much longer, have greater aceleration, and have a lower carbon footprint.
If they already have the infrastructure (wires, etc) in place, why don't they use it? Why run diesles under the wire?"
Good question. MARC already has enough electrics (10, counting these 4) to use on all 6 of their DEDICATED Penn Line sets. The thing is though that at off-peak times or for reverse flow trains shorter sets from the Brunswick and Camden lines are used on the Penn Line. Those lines are all diesel since they're owned by CSX. It wouldn't make sense to run electrics on them anywaay since the trains are shorter (usually 3 to 5 cars) and you won't see electrics (which have 2 to 3 times the horsepower of diesels) anywhere pulling trains that short since it's overkill.
one4all7 (10/08/2009, 6:58 PM )