A second type of electric used by the
Milwaukee Road was the now-famed "bi-polars," Class EP-2. Unique in both
appearance and design, the five bi-polars were passenger locomotives with
a long record of outstanding service.
They were gearless electric locomotives,
meaning that the armature of the motor was also the driving axle. When
current was introduced and the magnetic field forced the armature to turn,
it turned the wheels directly, not through gears as was the case in other
types of electrics.
Long, low, and multi-wheeled, the bi-polars
were once called "centipedes on rails." They were built by General
Electric-Alco and were delivered in 1919 and 1920.
The unique appearance of these
locomotives made them the star performers of the railroad's electric
passenger fleet. The low curved hoods of the massive bi-polars showed up
on almost all of the railroad's transcontinental passenger advertisements
from the 1920s into the 1950s.
Designed to run at 70 m.p.h. and capable
of up to 4,120 horsepower, a single unit could handle a whole train over
any grade on the line with smooth, silent, smokeless power.
The simple but rugged bi-polars gave
years of almost trouble-free service in the Cascades. A railroad policy
change ended their use on the Olympian Hiawatha in 1956, and eventually
they were put in storage at the railroad's Deer Lodge, Mont., shops. An
attempt to convert the units to freight service was unsuccessful, and as a
result, in the early 1960s, four of the units were scrapped. The fifth was
donated to the National Museum of Transport in St. Louis, Mo., in 1961.
Probably
the most famous exploit of a Milwaukee Road bi-polar was a "tug-of-war"
held at Erie, Pa., in 1920.
Fresh off the production line, No. 10251
was coupled nose to nose with two modern steam engines at the General
Electric plant. Actually it was to be a pushing rather than a pulling
contest since drawbars of the time would not have been able to withstand
the tremendous stress.
From a standstill, the throttles of the
steam engines were opened first and the bi-polar was pushed slowly
backwards down the track. Then the electric began to draw power.
Simultaneously, the throttle of the electric was opened further and the
steam engine throttles were advanced to their last notch. With a
tremendous effort, the steam engines smoked and pushed and strained, but
they came to a complete halt. As the controller of the bi-polar was
advanced still further, the steam engines, with drive wheels still
churning, were pushed backwards.
In a similar test of regenerative
braking, the two steam engines pushed the electric until regenerative
braking was switched on. As regeneration was turned to full power, the
pushing locomotives slowed down. With throttles wide open, the steam
engines could scarcely budge the electric which, besides winning the
contest, was returning electricity to the overhead trolley wire.
Similar tests were later held on
Milwaukee Road track in the west, with the bi-polars emerging victorious
each time. |
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The Bi-Polars
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photograph
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specifications
"Tug-of-wars" were
actually pushing contests...
The steam engines, drive wheels
churning, were pushed backwards!
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